QTLs conferring resistance to fusarium basal rot, pink root and complementary pinks in onions

The present disclosure provides for unique onion plants with QTLs conferring Fusarium basal rot and pink root resistance and lacking the complementary pinks trait and their progeny. Such plants may comprise an introgressed QTL associated with multiple disease resistance coupled with a desirable bulb color. In certain aspects, compositions, including distinct polymorphic molecular markers, and methods for producing, breeding, identifying, selecting, and the like of plants or germplasm with disease resistance and/or desirable bulb color are provided.

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Description
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/909,883 filed Nov. 27, 2013, herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to the field of agriculture and, more specifically, to methods and compositions for producing onion plants with resistance to disease combined with a favorable bulb color.

INCORPORATION OF SEQUENCE LISTING

The sequence listing that is contained in the file named “SEMB012US_ST25.txt,” which is 61.3 kilobytes as measured in Microsoft Windows operating system and was created on Nov. 20, 2014, is filed electronically herewith and incorporated herein by reference.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Plant disease resistance is an important trait in plant breeding, particularly for production of food crops. Economically important diseases that affect onion plants include Fusarium Basal Rot (Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. cepae) and Pink Root (Phoma terrestris), among others. These diseases can result in loss of plants, which affects commercial onion crops. Plant breeding efforts have resulted in many onion varieties that are resistant to disease, but such efforts in many cases have been complicated by issues such as genetic linkage, inadequate phenotypic assays, and complex or poorly understood inheritance of traits.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

In one aspect, the invention provides an onion plant comprising resistance to Fusarium basal rot and pink root, wherein the plant further comprises lack of the complementary pinks trait. In one embodiment, the onion plant comprises a cis-coupled linkage comprising resistance to Fusarium basal rot conferred by said onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0345038 (SEQ ID NO:3) and NQ0257326 (SEQ ID NO:23) on linkage group 2 (LG2), resistance to pink root conferred by said onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0257277 (SEQ ID NO:22) and NQ0258453 (SEQ ID NO:27) on linkage group 2 (LG2), and lack of the complimentary pinks bulb color conferred by said onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0257220 (SEQ ID NO:26) and NQ0257692 (SEQ ID NO:29) on linkage group 2 (LG2). In another embodiment, the cis-coupled linkage is introgressed into an onion variety selected from the group consisting of North American Yellow and Universal Yellow. In another embodiment, the invention provides a part of an onion plant comprising resistance to Fusarium basal rot and pink root, wherein the plant further comprises lack of the complementary pinks trait, wherein the part of a plant is further defined as pollen, an ovule, a leaf, an embryo, a root, a root tip, an anther, a flower, a bulb, a stem, a shoot, a seed, a protoplast, a cell, and a callus. In still other embodiments, the onion plant is an agronomically elite line, or a hybrid or an inbred.

In one aspect, the invention provides an onion plant comprising in its genome at least one introgressed allele locus, wherein said introgressed allele locus comprises: an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0345038 (SEQ ID NO:3) and NQ0257326 (SEQ ID NO:23) on linkage group 2 (LG2), conferring resistance to Fusarium basal rot (FBR); an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0257277 (SEQ ID NO:22) and NQ0258453 (SEQ ID NO:27) on linkage group 2 (LG2), conferring resistance to Pink Root (PR); an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0257220 (SEQ ID NO:26) and NQ0257692 (SEQ ID NO:29) on linkage group 2 (LG2) conferring lack of the Complimentary Pinks bulb color; an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0258523 (SEQ ID NO:30) and NQ0345206 (SEQ ID NO:36) on linkage group 3 (LG3), conferring resistance to Fusarium basal rot (FBR); an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0345564 (SEQ ID NO:38) and NQ0257917 (SEQ ID NO:63) on linkage group 4 (LG4), conferring resistance to Fusarium basal rot (FBR); an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0344978 (SEQ ID NO:49) and NQ0344766 (SEQ ID NO:55) on linkage group 4 (LG4), conferring resistance to Pink Root (PR); an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0258361 (SEQ ID NO:37) and NQ0344778 (SEQ ID NO:61) on linkage group 4 (LG4) conferring production or inhibition of bulb color; or an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0257378 (SEQ ID NO:64) and NQ0345734 (SEQ ID NO:74) on linkage group 6 (LG6) conferring a red pigment bulb color; or a progeny plant therefrom. In one embodiment, the onion plant comprises a cis-coupled linkage comprising resistance to Fusarium basal rot (FBR) conferred by said onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0345038 (SEQ ID NO:3) and NQ0257326 (SEQ ID NO:23) on linkage group 2 (LG2), resistance to Pink Root conferred by said onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0257277 (SEQ ID NO:22) and NQ0258453 (SEQ ID NO:27) on linkage group 2 (LG2), and lack of the Complimentary Pinks bulb color conferred by said onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0257220 (SEQ ID NO:26) and NQ0257692 (SEQ ID NO:29) on linkage group 2 (LG2). In another embodiment, the cis-coupled linkage is introgressed into an onion variety selected from the group consisting of North American Yellow and Universal Yellow. In another embodiment, a part of the onion plant is defined as pollen, an ovule, a leaf, an embryo, a root, a root tip, an anther, a flower, a bulb, a stem, a shoot, a seed, a protoplast, a cell, and a callus. In other embodiments, the onion plant is an agronomically elite line or a hybrid or an inbred.

In another aspect, the invention provides a method of detecting in at least one onion plant a genotype associated with disease resistance or bulb color, the method comprising the step of: (i) detecting in at least one onion plant an allele of at least one polymorphic nucleic acid that is associated with disease resistance or bulb color, wherein the polymorphic nucleic acid is in or genetically linked to: an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0345038 (SEQ ID NO:3) and NQ0257326 (SEQ ID NO:23) on linkage group 2 (LG2), conferring resistance to Fusarium basal rot (FBR); an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0257277 (SEQ ID NO:22) and NQ0258453 (SEQ ID NO:27) on linkage group 2 (LG2), conferring resistance to Pink Root (PR); an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0257220 (SEQ ID NO:26) and NQ0257692 (SEQ ID NO:29) on linkage group 2 (LG2) conferring lack of the Complimentary Pinks bulb color; an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0258523 (SEQ ID NO:30) and NQ0345206 (SEQ ID NO:36) on linkage group 3 (LG3), conferring resistance to Fusarium basal rot (FBR); an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0345564 (SEQ ID NO:38) and NQ0257917 (SEQ ID NO:63) on linkage group 4 (LG4), conferring resistance to Fusarium basal rot (FBR); an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0344978 (SEQ ID NO:49) and NQ0344766 (SEQ ID NO:55) on linkage group 4 (LG4), conferring resistance to Pink Root (PR); an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0258361 (SEQ ID NO:37) and NQ0344778 (SEQ ID NO:61) on linkage group 4 (LG4) conferring production or inhibition of bulb color; or an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0257378 (SEQ ID NO:64) and NQ0345734 (SEQ ID NO:74) on linkage group 6 (LG6) conferring a red pigment bulb color. In an embodiment, the method further comprises the step of: (ii) selecting at least one onion plant in which a genotype associated with disease resistance or bulb color has been detected. In other embodiments, the onion plant is an agronomically elite line or a hybrid or an inbred, or a progeny plant resulting from the cross of at least one parent plant comprising disease resistance.

In another aspect, the invention provides a method for producing an onion plant that comprises in its genome at least one locus associated with disease resistance or bulb color, the method comprising: (i) crossing a first onion plant lacking a locus associated with disease resistance or bulb color with a second onion plant comprising a locus associated with disease resistance or bulb color defined by: an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0345038 (SEQ ID NO:3) and NQ0257326 (SEQ ID NO:23) on linkage group 2 (LG2), conferring resistance to Fusarium basal rot (FBR); an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0257277 (SEQ ID NO:22) and NQ0258453 (SEQ ID NO:27) on linkage group 2 (LG2), conferring resistance to Pink Root (PR); an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0257220 (SEQ ID NO:26) and NQ0257692 (SEQ ID NO:29) on linkage group 2 (LG2) conferring lack of the Complimentary Pinks bulb color; an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0258523 (SEQ ID NO:30) and NQ0345206 (SEQ ID NO:36) on linkage group 3 (LG3), conferring resistance to Fusarium basal rot (FBR); an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0345564 (SEQ ID NO:38) and NQ0257917 (SEQ ID NO:63) on linkage group 4 (LG4), conferring resistance to Fusarium basal rot (FBR); an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0344978 (SEQ ID NO:49) and NQ0344766 (SEQ ID NO:55) on linkage group 4 (LG4), conferring resistance to Pink Root (PR); an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0258361 (SEQ ID NO:37) and NQ0344778 (SEQ ID NO:61) on linkage group 4 (LG4) conferring production or inhibition of bulb color; or an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0257378 (SEQ ID NO:64) and NQ0345734 (SEQ ID NO:74) on linkage group 6 (LG6) conferring a red pigment bulb color; (ii) detecting in progeny resulting from said crossing at least a first polymorphic locus in or genetically linked to said locus associated with disease resistance or bulb color; and (iii) selecting an onion plant comprising said polymorphism and said locus associated with disease resistance or bulb color. In an embodiment, the method further comprises the step of: (iv) crossing the onion plant of step (iii) with itself or another onion plant to produce a further generation. In another embodiment, steps (iii) and (iv) are repeated from about 3 times to about 10 times. In another embodiment, the onion plant comprises resistance to Fusarium basal rot (FBR) conferred by said onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0345038 (SEQ ID NO:3) and NQ0257326 (SEQ ID NO:23) on linkage group 2 (LG2), resistance to Pink Root conferred by said onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0257277 (SEQ ID NO:22) and NQ0258453 (SEQ ID NO:27) on linkage group 2 (LG2), and lack of the Complimentary Pinks bulb color conferred by said onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0257220 (SEQ ID NO:26) and NQ0257692 (SEQ ID NO:29) on linkage group 2 (LG2). In other embodiments, the onion plant is an agronomically elite line or a hybrid or an inbred.

Another aspect of the invention provides a method of onion plant breeding, the method comprising the steps of: (i) selecting at least a first onion plant comprising at least one allele of a polymorphic nucleic acid that is in or genetically linked to a QTL associated with disease resistance or bulb color, wherein the QTL maps to: an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0345038 (SEQ ID NO:3) and NQ0257326 (SEQ ID NO:23) on linkage group 2 (LG2), conferring resistance to Fusarium basal rot (FBR); an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0257277 (SEQ ID NO:22) and NQ0258453 (SEQ ID NO:27) on linkage group 2 (LG2), conferring resistance to Pink Root (PR); an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0257220 (SEQ ID NO:26) and NQ0257692 (SEQ ID NO:29) on linkage group 2 (LG2) conferring lack of the Complimentary Pinks bulb color; an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0258523 (SEQ ID NO:30) and NQ0345206 (SEQ ID NO:36) on linkage group 3 (LG3), conferring resistance to Fusarium basal rot (FBR); an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0345564 (SEQ ID NO:38) and NQ0257917 (SEQ ID NO:63) on linkage group 4 (LG4), conferring resistance to Fusarium basal rot (FBR); an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0344978 (SEQ ID NO:49) and NQ0344766 (SEQ ID NO:55) on linkage group 4 (LG4), conferring resistance to Pink Root (PR); an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0258361 (SEQ ID NO:37) and NQ0344778 (SEQ ID NO:61) on linkage group 4 (LG4) conferring production or inhibition of bulb color; or an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0257378 (SEQ ID NO:64) and NQ0345734 (SEQ ID NO:74) on linkage group 6 (LG6) conferring a red pigment bulb color; (ii) crossing the first onion plant with itself or a second onion plant to produce progeny onion plants comprising the QTL associated with disease resistance or bulb color. In one embodiment, at least one polymorphic nucleic acid that is genetically linked to said QTL associated with disease resistance or bulb color maps within 40 cM, 20 cM, 15 cM, 10 cM, 5 cM, or 1 cM of said QTL associated with disease resistance or bulb color.

In another aspect, the invention provides a method of introgressing an allele into an onion plant, the method comprising: (i) genotyping at least one onion plant in a population with respect to at least one polymorphic nucleic acid located in or genetically linked to: an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0345038 (SEQ ID NO:3) and NQ0257326 (SEQ ID NO:23) on linkage group 2 (LG2), conferring resistance to Fusarium basal rot (FBR); an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0257277 (SEQ ID NO:22) and NQ0258453 (SEQ ID NO:27) on linkage group 2 (LG2), conferring resistance to Pink Root (PR); an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0257220 (SEQ ID NO:26) and NQ0257692 (SEQ ID NO:29) on linkage group 2 (LG2) conferring lack of the Complimentary Pinks bulb color; an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0258523 (SEQ ID NO:30) and NQ0345206 (SEQ ID NO:36) on linkage group 3 (LG3), conferring resistance to Fusarium basal rot (FBR); an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0345564 (SEQ ID NO:38) and NQ0257917 (SEQ ID NO:63) on linkage group 4 (LG4), conferring resistance to Fusarium basal rot (FBR); an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0344978 (SEQ ID NO:49) and NQ0344766 (SEQ ID NO:55) on linkage group 4 (LG4), conferring resistance to Pink Root (PR); an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0258361 (SEQ ID NO:37) and NQ0344778 (SEQ ID NO:61) on linkage group 4 (LG4) conferring production or inhibition of bulb color; or an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0257378 (SEQ ID NO:64) and NQ0345734 (SEQ ID NO:74) on linkage group 6 (LG6) conferring a red pigment bulb color; (ii) selecting from the population at least one onion plant comprising at least one allele associated with disease resistance or bulb color. In some embodiments, the onion plant is an agronomically elite line or a hybrid or an inbred. In another embodiment, the invention provides an onion plant obtained by such methods.

In another aspect, the invention provides an onion plant comprising resistance to Fusarium basal rot and pink root, wherein the plant further comprises lack of the complementary pinks trait.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1: Shows a desired haplotype configuration for Universal Yellow onion donor germplasm that is resistant to both Fusarium Basal Rot (FBR) and Pink Root (PR). A 1706 parental allele on chromosome 2 (position 62-63) results in North American Yellow onion germplasm that is resistant to both Fusarium Basal Rot (FBR) and Pink Root (PR).

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEQUENCE LISTING

SEQ ID NOs:1-74—Marker sequences used for marker-assisted selection (MAS) of disease resistance and bulb color phenotypes in onion.

SEQ ID NOs:75-115—Sequences of VIC-labeled probes used for Taqman® assays.

SEQ ID NOs:116-156—Sequences of FAM-labeled probes used for Taqman® assays.

SEQ ID NOs:157-197 and 239-240—Sequences of forward primers used for Taqman® assays.

SEQ ID NOs:198-238—Sequences of reverse primers used for Taqman® assays.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

The present invention provides methods and compositions for producing disease resistant onion plants exhibiting resistance to Fusarium Basal Rot (FBR), caused by the fungal pathogen Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. cepae and/or Pink Root (PR), caused by the fungal pathogen Phoma terrestris; while also exhibiting an agronomically desirable bulb color (e.g. yellow), conferred by the lack of a trait called complementary pinks (CP) and/or a bulb color locus identified herein. Methods of breeding and selecting disease resistant onion lines are further provided, as well as plants and plant parts of such disease resistant onions. Also disclosed herein are molecular markers that are linked to quantitative trait loci (“QTL”) contributing to such plant disease resistance. These markers facilitate the use of these loci singly or in any desired loci combination.

Surprisingly, the inventors have been able to develop methods and compositions that allow, for the first time, efficient production of onion plants with specific disease resistance, while avoiding or minimizing the undesirable CP bulb color trait, which had previously been associated with such disease resistance loci. Such traits have previously been unavailable for combination into a single onion plant without the deleterious linkage of disease resistance loci and the undesirable CP trait. The present invention permits production of an onion plant possessing a desired disease resistance trait as described herein without a genetically linked allele causing the CP trait. The ability to combine these traits into a single onion plant is the result of breaking of the linkage between the disease resistance trait and the presence of CP. In an embodiment of the present invention, breaking linkage between two traits may be accomplished by repeated meiotic events (i.e., recombination) to produce plants with both desired traits. Thus, one embodiment of the current invention provides an onion plant comprising disease resistance and a desired bulb color, wherein the desired bulb color is the result of the absence of an allele conferring CP.

The invention represents a significant advance in the art in that it provides, in certain embodiments, methods and compositions permitting introgression or resistance to selected diseases and combinations of diseases into a commercially desirable genetic background. In specific embodiments of the invention, a QTL conferring resistance to at least one disease including, but not limited to FBR and PR, and lacking CP and/or providing a desirable bulb color, is identified and defined by the map interval bounded by positions in the onion genome that correspond to NQ0345038 (SEQ ID NO:3) and NQ0257326 (SEQ ID NO:23) on linkage group 2 (LG 2); NQ0257277 (SEQ ID NO:22) and NQ0258453 (SEQ ID NO:27) on linkage group 2 (LG 2); NQ0257220 (SEQ ID NO:26) and NQ0257692 (SEQ ID NO:29) on linkage group 2 (LG 2); NQ0258523 (SEQ ID NO:30) and NQ0345206 (SEQ ID NO:36) on linkage group 3 (LG 3); NQ0345564 (SEQ ID NO:38) and NQ0257917 (SEQ ID NO:63) on linkage group 4 (LG 4); NQ0344978 (SEQ ID NO:49) and NQ0344766 (SEQ ID NO:55) on linkage group 4 (LG 4); NQ0258361 (SEQ ID NO:37) and NQ0344778 (SEQ ID NO:61) on linkage group 4 (LG 4); or NQ0257378 (SEQ ID NO:64) and NQ0345734 (SEQ ID NO:74) on linkage group 6 (LG6). The invention further provides an onion plant comprising one or more QTL conferring disease resistance, along with a desirable bulb color, wherein the desirable bulb color may be conferred by lack of CP or by another bulb color locus described herein. In one embodiment, the desirable bulb color in accordance with the invention may be conferred by a lack of the CP locus, a gene in the anthocyanin biosynthesis pathway, a dihydroflavanol 4-reductase (DFR) gene, or other genes or loci known in the art which confer a desired bulb color. In accordance with the present invention, markers within the QTL intervals defined herein may be used to identify disease resistant plants. In a specific embodiment, novel cis-coupling events as described herein may be combined together into a single haplotype of a linkage group, for example on LG2, in order to produce plants with disease resistance together with additional desired traits.

Through use of the corresponding markers provided herein and/or other markers that may be linked thereto, one of skill in the art may use genetic markers to introgress and combine (“stack”) disease resistance traits or other desirable traits in commercially relevant onion lines. In a specific embodiment, onion plants according to the invention may be crossed to produce hybrid onion plants or varieties that comprise the desired traits.

In accordance with the invention, identified disease resistance QTL may be introgressed into any onion genetic background. In an embodiment, onion lines comprising a commercially favorable bulb color, such as a yellow bulb, including North American yellow or Universal Yellow for example, may be used for introgression of QTL conferring disease resistance combined with any additional desirable trait such as bulb color and/or lack of CP. Thus, using the methods of the invention and starting from any genetic sources identified herein or available in the art, an onion plant of any genotype may be produced that further comprises the desired disease resistance, including FBR and PR, coupled with any additional traits. In addition, such plants may be prepared to comprise other desired traits, for example elite agronomic traits.

Certain embodiments further provide methods of detecting in an onion plant a genotype associated with disease resistance, which may be coupled with a desired bulb color. Certain embodiments also provide methods of identifying and selecting an onion plant comprising in its genome a genotype associated with disease resistance coupled with a desired bulb color. Further embodiments provide methods of producing an onion plant that comprises in its genome at least one introgressed locus associated with disease resistance coupled with a desired bulb color and methods for introgressing such alleles into a given onion variety. Onion plants and parts thereof made by any of said methods are also provided for, as well as polymorphic nucleic acid sequences that may be used in the production and identification of such plants. In an embodiment, the invention provides a food product comprising such an onion plant or a bulb or other plant part of such a plant.

By providing markers to obtain a phenotype of interest, such as disease resistance, or disease resistance coupled with a desired bulb color, the invention results in significant economization by allowing replacement of costly, time-intensive, and potentially unreliable phenotyping assays. Further, breeding programs can be designed to explicitly drive the frequency of specific favorable phenotypes by targeting particular genotypes. Fidelity of these associations may be monitored continuously to ensure maintained predictive ability and informed breeding decisions.

In accordance with the invention, one of skill in the art may identify a candidate germplasm source possessing a desirable disease resistance phenotype coupled with a desired bulb color phenotype as described herein. The techniques of the present invention may be used to identify desirable disease-resistant phenotypes coupled with a desired bulb color by identifying genetic markers associated with such a phenotype or phenotypes, or such techniques may employ phenotypic assays to identify desired plants either alone or in combination with genetic assays, thereby also identifying a marker genotype associated with the trait that may be used for production of new varieties with the methods described herein.

The invention provides for the introgression of at least a first locus conferring disease resistance coupled with a desired bulb color into a given genetic background. Successful onion production depends on attention to various horticultural practices. These include soil management with special attention to proper fertilization, crop establishment with appropriate spacing, weed control, and the introduction of bees or other insects for pollination, irrigation, and pest management. Onion crops can be established from seed or from starter bulbs, among other methods known in the art. Starter bulbs can result in an earlier crop compared with a crop produced from direct seeding.

Development of Onion Plants with Disease Resistance Coupled with a Desired Bulb Color

The present disclosure identifies quantitative trait loci (QTL) with major influence on disease resistance of onion plants and QTL with major influence on bulb color, as well as markers genetically linked to and predictive of such loci that can be used for the tracking and introgression of the QTL into desirable germplasm, such as by marker-assisted selection (MAS) and/or marker-assisted backcrossing. The invention also provides for introgression of a single locus conferring disease resistance coupled with a desirable bulb color. Such desirable bulb color may be conferred by a bulb color locus as described herein or known in the art or by a lack of a locus for CP. An onion plant of the present invention may also be produced by introgressing one or more QTL conferring disease resistance into an onion plant comprising a desired bulb color to produce an onion plant with both disease resistance and desired bulb color.

As described in the Examples, five QTL were identified for disease resistance to FBR and PR, along with three loci controlling bulb color and/or CP. One of these color loci was found to colocalize with a marker in a candidate gene from the anthocyanin biosynthesis pathway. The main effect QTL for both FBR and PR localized to a similar region on LG2, where one of the loci for complementary pinks has also been localized. These mapping results verify a linkage of FBR, PR, and the CP trait, and why it has been difficult to combine resistance of these diseases without CP during onion breeding. QTL intervals and markers for these disease traits may now be used to develop new onion lines and varieties. In an embodiment, novel cis-coupling linkages, for example on LG2 as described herein, allows the combination of disease resistance in donor onion lines such as North American yellow and Universal Yellow, among others.

The present invention contemplates the tracking and introduction of such QTL and any combinations thereof into a given genetic background. One of ordinary skill will understand that resistance to one or more diseases conferred by this QTL may be introgressed from one genotype to another using a locus described herein via MAS. Accordingly, an onion germplasm source can be selected that has resistance to one or more diseases. Using this QTL, a breeder may select an onion plant with resistance to disease or with resistance to disease coupled with a desirable bulb color, or track such phenotypes during breeding using MAS for the region described herein. Provided with the present disclosure, one of ordinary skill can introduce resistance to one or more diseases coupled with desired bulb color into any genetic background.

QTL identified herein may be used for MAS for resistance to one or more diseases coupled with a desired bulb color in onion. This discovery of a QTL associated with disease resistance coupled with a desired bulb color may facilitate the development of commercially valuable onion plants or varieties thereof having resistance to multiple diseases.

For most breeding objectives, commercial breeders may work within germplasm that is often referred to as the “cultivated type” or “elite.” This germplasm is easier to use in plant breeding because it generally performs well when evaluated for horticultural performance. The performance advantage a cultivated type provides is sometimes offset by a lack of allelic diversity. This is the tradeoff a breeder accepts when working with cultivated germplasm-better overall performance, but a lack of allelic diversity. Breeders generally accept this tradeoff because progress is faster when working with cultivated material than when breeding with genetically diverse sources.

In contrast, when a breeder makes either intra-specific crosses, or inter-specific crosses, a converse trade off occurs. In these examples, a breeder typically crosses cultivated germplasm with a non-cultivated type. In such crosses, the breeder may gain access to novel alleles from the non-cultivated type, but may have to overcome the genetic drag associated with the donor parent. Because of the difficulty with this breeding strategy, this approach often fails because of fertility and fecundity problems. The difficulty with this breeding approach extends to many crops, and is exemplified with an important disease-resistant phenotype that was first described in tomato in 1944 (Smith, Proc. Am. Soc. Hort. Sci. 44:413-16). In this cross, nematode disease resistance was transferred from L. peruvianum (PI128657) into a cultivated tomato. Despite intensive breeding, it was not until the mid-1970's before breeders could overcome the genetic drag and release successful lines carrying this trait. Indeed, even today, tomato breeders deliver this disease resistance gene to a hybrid variety from only one parent.

To date, the process of introgressing novel resistance genes into acceptable commercial types is a long and often arduous process and can be difficult because the trait may be polygenic, or have low heritability, or have linkage drag or some combination thereof. While some phenotypes are determined by the genotype at one locus, most variation observed in nature is continuous. Unlike simply inherited traits, continuous variation can be the result of polygenic inheritance, and may be difficult to track. Loci that affect continuous variation are referred to as QTL. Variation in the phenotype of a quantitative trait is the result of the allelic composition at the QTL and the environmental effect. The heritability of a trait is the proportion of the phenotypic variation attributed to the genetic variance, which varies between 0 and 1.0. Thus, a trait with heritability near 1.0 is not greatly affected by the environment. Those skilled in the art recognize the importance of creating commercial lines with high heritability horticultural traits because these cultivars will allow growers to produce a crop with uniform market specifications.

Genomic Region, QTL, Polymorphic Nucleic Acids, and Alleles Associated with Disease Resistance and Favorable Bulb Color in Onion

Markers useful for the present invention can be designed from the onion genome. Duangjit et al. published the most recent publicly available genetic map of the onion genome (Theor Appl Genet 126(8):2093-2101, 2013). Applicants have discovered genomic regions, QTL, alleles, polymorphic nucleic acids, linked markers, and the like that when present in certain allelic forms are associated with disease resistance and favorable bulb color in onion. Using the methods outlined herein, QTL were identified in onion for resistance to Fusarium Basal Rot (FBR) and Pink Root (PR), while also exhibiting a favorable bulb color. Genomic regions associated with such traits were located at onion linkage group 2 (LG2) defined by loci NQ0345038 (SEQ ID NO:3) and NQ0257326 (SEQ ID NO:23); at LG2 defined by loci NQ0257277 (SEQ ID NO:22) and NQ0258453 (SEQ ID NO:27); at LG2 defined by loci NQ0257220 (SEQ ID NO:26) and NQ0257692 (SEQ ID NO:29); at LG3 defined by loci NQ0258523 SEQ ID NO:30) and NQ0345206 SEQ ID NO:36); at LG4 defined by loci NQ0345564 SEQ ID NO:38) and NQ0257917 SEQ ID NO:63); at LG4 defined by loci NQ0344978 SEQ ID NO:49) and NQ0344766 SEQ ID NO:55); at LG 4 defined by loci NQ0258361 SEQ ID NO:37) and NQ0344778 SEQ ID NO:61); or at LG6 defined by loci NQ0257378 SEQ ID NO:64) and NQ0345734 SEQ ID NO:74).

Certain of the various embodiments of the present disclosure utilize a QTL or polymorphic nucleic acid marker or allele located at or within such genomic regions. Flanking markers on LG2 that identify a genomic region associated with resistance to multiple diseases or favorable bulb color include NQ0345038 (SEQ ID NO:3) and NQ0257692 (SEQ ID NO:29). Intervening markers on LG2 that identify a genomic region associated with resistance to multiple diseases or favorable bulb color may include at least any of SEQ ID NOs:4-28. Flanking markers on LG3 that identify a genomic region associated with resistance to disease or favorable bulb color include NQ0258523 (SEQ ID NO:30) and NQ0345206 (SEQ ID NO:36). Intervening markers on LG3 that identify a genomic region associated with resistance to disease or favorable bulb color may include at least any of SEQ ID NOs:31-35. Flanking markers on LG4 that identify a genomic region associated with resistance to multiple diseases or favorable bulb color include NQ0258361 (SEQ ID NO:37) and NQ0257917 (SEQ ID NO:63). Intervening markers on LG4 that identify a genomic region associated with resistance to multiple diseases or favorable bulb color may include at least any of SEQ ID NOs:38-62. Flanking markers on LG6 that identify a genomic region associated with resistance to disease or favorable bulb color include NQ0257378 (SEQ ID NO:64) and NQ0345734 (SEQ ID NO:74). Intervening markers on LG6 that identify a genomic region associated with resistance to disease or favorable bulb color may include at least any of SEQ ID NOs:65-73. These genomic regions, or subregions thereof, associated with disease resistance and/or favorable bulb color can be described as being flanked by or defined by any of the markers described herein, although one of skill will recognize that additional markers may be used, as well.

The above markers and allelic states are exemplary. One of skill in the art would recognize how to identify onion plants with other polymorphic nucleic acid markers and allelic states thereof related to disease resistance or desirable bulb color in onion consistent with the present disclosure. One of skill in the art would also know how to identify the allelic state of other polymorphic nucleic acid markers located in the genomic region(s) or linked to the QTL or other markers identified herein, to determine their association with disease resistance or desirable bulb color in onion.

One of skill in the art would understand that polymorphic nucleic acids that are located in the genomic region(s) identified may be used in certain embodiments of the methods of the invention. Given the provisions herein of a genomic region, QTL, and polymorphic markers identified herein, additional markers located either within or near a genomic region described herein that are associated with the phenotype may be obtained by typing new markers in various germplasm. The genomic region, QTL, and polymorphic markers identified herein can also be mapped relative to any publicly available physical or genetic map to place the region described herein on such map. One of skill in the art would also understand that additional polymorphic nucleic acids that are genetically linked to the QTL associated with disease resistance or desirable bulb color in onion and that map within about 40 cM, 20 cM, 10 cM, 5 cM, or 1 cM of the QTL or the markers associated with disease resistance or desirable bulb color in onion may also be used.

Introgression of a Genomic Locus Associated with Disease Resistance and/or Desirable Bulb Color in Onion

Provided herein are onion plants comprising one or more introgressed genomic regions associated with disease resistance and/or desirable bulb color and methods of obtaining the same. Marker-assisted introgression involves the transfer of a chromosomal region, defined by one or more markers, from one germplasm to a second germplasm. Offspring of a cross that contain the introgressed genomic region can be identified by the combination of markers characteristic of the desired introgressed genomic region from a first germplasm (e.g., germplasm with disease resistance or desirable bulb color in onion) and both linked and unlinked markers characteristic of the desired genetic background of a second germplasm.

Flanking markers that fall on both the telomere proximal end and the centromere proximal end of any of these genomic intervals may be useful in a variety of breeding efforts that include, but are not limited to, introgression of genomic regions associated with disease resistance coupled with a desirable bulb color in onion into a genetic background comprising markers associated with germplasm that ordinarily contains a genotype associated with another phenotype.

Markers that are linked and either immediately adjacent or adjacent to the identified disease resistance and/or desirable bulb color QTL that permit introgression of the QTL in the absence of extraneous linked DNA from the source germplasm containing the QTL are provided herewith. Those of skill in the art will appreciate that when seeking to introgress a smaller genomic region comprising a QTL associated with disease resistance and/or desirable bulb color in onion described herein, that any of the telomere proximal or centromere proximal markers that are immediately adjacent to a larger genomic region comprising the QTL can be used to introgress that smaller genomic region.

A marker within about 40 cM of a marker of a disease resistance QTL or desirable bulb color QTL described herein, for example, may be useful in a variety of breeding efforts that include, but are not limited to, introgression of genomic regions associated with disease resistance coupled with a desirable bulb color in onion into a genetic background comprising markers associated with germplasm that ordinarily contains a genotype associated with another phenotype. For example, a marker within 40 cM, 20 cM, 15 cM, 10 cM, 5 cM, 2 cM, or 1 cM or less of a disease resistance QTL or desirable bulb color QTL or marker described herein can be used for marker-assisted introgression of disease resistance coupled with a desirable bulb color in onion.

A marker in linkage disequilibrium with a disease resistance or desirable bulb color phenotype QTL marker on LG2, LG3, LG4, and/or LG6 described herein can thus be used for marker-assisted introgression of disease resistance or desirable bulb color in onion. For example, a marker within 40 cM, 20 cM, 15 cM, 10 cM, 5 cM, 2 cM, or 1 cM of a disease resistance or desirable bulb color QTL marker on LG2, LG3, LG4, and/or LG6 as described herein can be used for marker-assisted introgression of disease resistance or desirable bulb color. As described above, a disease resistance or desirable bulb color QTL marker on LG2, LG3, LG4, and/or LG6 may include one or more of SEQ ID NO:1-74 or any loci or sub-regions described herein, as well as other known markers in those same regions and that are genetically linked thereto.

Molecular Assisted Breeding Techniques

Genetic markers that can be used in the practice of the present invention include, but are not limited to, Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphisms (RFLP), Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphisms (AFLP), Simple Sequence Repeats (SSR), simple sequence length polymorphisms (SSLPs), Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNP), Insertion/Deletion Polymorphisms (Indels), Variable Number Tandem Repeats (VNTR), and Random Amplified Polymorphic DNA (RAPD), isozymes, and others known to those skilled in the art. Marker discovery and development in crops provides the initial framework for applications to marker-assisted breeding activities (U.S. Patent Pub. Nos.: 2005/0204780, 2005/0216545, 2005/0218305, and 2006/00504538). The resulting “genetic map” is the representation of the relative position of characterized loci (polymorphic nucleic acid markers or any other locus for which alleles can be identified) to each other.

Polymorphisms comprising as little as a single nucleotide change can be assayed in a number of ways. For example, detection can be made by electrophoretic techniques including a single strand conformational polymorphism (Orita et al., Genomics 8(2):271-278, 1989), denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (Myers, EPO 0273085, 1985), or cleavage fragment length polymorphisms (Life Technologies, Inc., Gathersberg, Md. 20877), but the widespread availability of DNA sequencing machines often makes it easier to just sequence amplified products directly. Once the polymorphic sequence difference is known, rapid assays can be designed for progeny testing, typically involving some version of PCR amplification of specific alleles (PASA, Sommer, et al., Biotechniques 12(1):82-87, 1992), or PCR amplification of multiple specific alleles (PAMSA, Dutton and Sommer, Biotechniques, 11(6):700-7002, 1991).

As a set, polymorphic markers serve as a useful tool for fingerprinting plants to inform the degree of identity of lines or varieties (U.S. Pat. No. 6,207,367). These markers form the basis for determining associations with phenotypes and can be used to drive genetic gain. In certain embodiments of methods of the invention, polymorphic nucleic acids can be used to detect in an onion plant a genotype associated with disease resistance coupled with a desirable bulb color, identify an onion plant with a genotype associated with disease resistance coupled with a desirable bulb color, and to select an onion plant with a genotype associated with disease resistance coupled with a desirable bulb color. In certain embodiments of methods of the invention, polymorphic nucleic acids can be used to produce an onion plant that comprises in its genome an introgressed locus associated with disease resistance coupled with a desirable bulb color. In certain embodiments of the invention, polymorphic nucleic acids can be used to breed progeny onion plants comprising a locus associated with disease resistance coupled with a desirable bulb color.

Certain genetic markers may include “dominant” or “codominant” markers. “Codominant” markers reveal the presence of two or more alleles (two per diploid individual). “Dominant” markers reveal the presence of only a single allele. Markers are preferably inherited in codominant fashion so that the presence of both alleles at a diploid locus, or multiple alleles in triploid or tetraploid loci, are readily detectable, and they are free of environmental variation, i.e., their heritability is 1. A marker genotype typically comprises two marker alleles at each locus in a diploid organism. The marker allelic composition of each locus can be either homozygous or heterozygous. Homozygosity is a condition where both alleles at a locus are characterized by the same nucleotide sequence. Heterozygosity refers to different conditions of the allele at a locus.

Nucleic acid-based analyses for determining the presence or absence of the genetic polymorphism (i.e. for genotyping) can be used in breeding programs for identification, selection, introgression, and the like. A wide variety of genetic markers for the analysis of genetic polymorphisms are available and known to those of skill in the art. The analysis may be used to select for genes, portions of genes, QTL, alleles, or genomic regions that comprise or are linked to a genetic marker that is linked to or associated with a disease resistance or desirable bulb color phenotype.

As used herein, nucleic acid analysis methods include, but are not limited to, PCR-based detection methods (for example, TaqMan assays), microarray methods, mass spectrometry-based methods and/or nucleic acid sequencing methods, including whole genome sequencing. In certain embodiments, the detection of polymorphic sites in a sample of DNA, RNA, or cDNA may be facilitated through the use of nucleic acid amplification methods. Such methods specifically increase the concentration of polynucleotides that span the polymorphic site, or include that site and sequences located either distal or proximal to it. Such amplified molecules can be readily detected by gel electrophoresis, fluorescence detection methods, or other means.

The use of TaqMan® probes in PCR is known in the art (see, for example, Holland et al., PNAS 88:7276-7280, 1991) and allows for increased specificity of PCR assays by fluorophore-based detection. In an embodiment of the invention, TaqMan® probes such as those set forth in Table 3 can be used to detect SNPs conferring disease resistance. TaqMan® assays use two specific primers that target a region flanking a SNP site and two fluorescent probes, each labeled with a different fluorophore (VIC or 6-FAM) covalently linked to the 5′ end of the probe. A non-fluorescent quencher near the 3′ end prevents liberation of the fluorescence if the probe is not degraded. During PCR, probes that hybridize specifically to DNA fragments are destroyed and the fluorescence of corresponding fluorophore is liberated.

One method of achieving such amplification employs the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) (Mullis et al. 1986 Cold Spring Harbor Symp. Quant. Biol. 51:263-273; European Patent 50,424; European Patent 84,796; European Patent 258,017; European Patent 237,362; European Patent 201,184; U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,683,202; 4,582,788; and 4,683,194), using primer pairs that are capable of hybridizing to the proximal sequences that define a polymorphism in its double-stranded form. Methods for typing DNA based on mass spectrometry can also be used. Such methods are disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,613,509 and 6,503,710, and references found therein.

Polymorphisms in DNA sequences can be detected or typed by a variety of effective methods well known in the art including, but not limited to, those disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,468,613, 5,217,863; 5,210,015; 5,876,930; 6,030,787; 6,004,744; 6,013,431; 5,595,890; 5,762,876; 5,945,283; 5,468,613; 6,090,558; 5,800,944; 5,616,464; 7,312,039; 7,238,476; 7,297,485; 7,282,355; 7,270,981 and 7,250,252 all of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entireties. However, the compositions and methods of the present invention can be used in conjunction with any polymorphism typing method to type polymorphisms in genomic DNA samples. These genomic DNA samples used include but are not limited to genomic DNA isolated directly from a plant, cloned genomic DNA, or amplified genomic DNA.

For instance, polymorphisms in DNA sequences can be detected by hybridization to allele-specific oligonucleotide (ASO) probes as disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,468,613 and 5,217,863. U.S. Pat. No. 5,468,613 discloses allele specific oligonucleotide hybridizations where single or multiple nucleotide variations in nucleic acid sequence can be detected in nucleic acids by a process in which the sequence containing the nucleotide variation is amplified, spotted on a membrane and treated with a labeled sequence-specific oligonucleotide probe.

Target nucleic acid sequence can also be detected by probe ligation methods as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,800,944 where sequence of interest is amplified and hybridized to probes followed by ligation to detect a labeled part of the probe.

Microarrays can also be used for polymorphism detection, wherein oligonucleotide probe sets are assembled in an overlapping fashion to represent a single sequence such that a difference in the target sequence at one point would result in partial probe hybridization (Borevitz et al., Genome Res. 13:513-523, 2003; Cui et al., Bioinformatics 21:3852-3858, 2005). On any one microarray, it is expected there will be a plurality of target sequences, which may represent genes and/or noncoding regions wherein each target sequence is represented by a series of overlapping oligonucleotides, rather than by a single probe. This platform provides for high throughput screening of a plurality of polymorphisms. Typing of target sequences by microarray-based methods is disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,799,122; 6,913,879; and 6,996,476.

Target nucleic acid sequence can also be detected by probe linking methods as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,616,464, employing at least one pair of probes having sequences homologous to adjacent portions of the target nucleic acid sequence and having side chains which non-covalently bind to form a stem upon base pairing of the probes to the target nucleic acid sequence. At least one of the side chains has a photoactivatable group which can form a covalent cross-link with the other side chain member of the stem.

Other methods for detecting SNPs and Indels include single base extension (SBE) methods. Examples of SBE methods include, but are not limited, to those disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,004,744; 6,013,431; 5,595,890; 5,762,876; and 5,945,283. SBE methods are based on extension of a nucleotide primer that is adjacent to a polymorphism to incorporate a detectable nucleotide residue upon extension of the primer. In certain embodiments, the SBE method uses three synthetic oligonucleotides. Two of the oligonucleotides serve as PCR primers and are complementary to sequence of the locus of genomic DNA which flanks a region containing the polymorphism to be assayed. Following amplification of the region of the genome containing the polymorphism, the PCR product is mixed with the third oligonucleotide (called an extension primer) which is designed to hybridize to the amplified DNA adjacent to the polymorphism in the presence of DNA polymerase and two differentially labeled dideoxynucleosidetriphosphates. If the polymorphism is present on the template, one of the labeled dideoxynucleosidetriphosphates can be added to the primer in a single base chain extension. The allele present is then inferred by determining which of the two differential labels was added to the extension primer. Homozygous samples will result in only one of the two labeled bases being incorporated and thus only one of the two labels will be detected. Heterozygous samples have both alleles present, and will thus direct incorporation of both labels (into different molecules of the extension primer) and thus both labels will be detected.

In another method for detecting polymorphisms, SNPs and Indels can be detected by methods disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,210,015; 5,876,930; and 6,030,787 in which an oligonucleotide probe having a 5′ fluorescent reporter dye and a 3′ quencher dye covalently linked to the 5′ and 3′ ends of the probe. When the probe is intact, the proximity of the reporter dye to the quencher dye results in the suppression of the reporter dye fluorescence, e.g. by Forster-type energy transfer. During PCR, forward and reverse primers hybridize to a specific sequence of the target DNA flanking a polymorphism while the hybridization probe hybridizes to polymorphism-containing sequence within the amplified PCR product. In the subsequent PCR cycle DNA polymerase with 5′→3′ exonuclease activity cleaves the probe and separates the reporter dye from the quencher dye resulting in increased fluorescence of the reporter.

In another embodiment, the locus or loci of interest can be directly sequenced using nucleic acid sequencing technologies. Methods for nucleic acid sequencing are known in the art and include technologies provided by 454 Life Sciences (Branford, Conn.), Agencourt Bioscience (Beverly, Mass.), Applied Biosystems (Foster City, Calif.), LI-COR Biosciences (Lincoln, Nebr.), NimbleGen Systems (Madison, Wis.), Illumina (San Diego, Calif.), and VisiGen Biotechnologies (Houston, Tex.). Such nucleic acid sequencing technologies comprise formats such as parallel bead arrays, sequencing by ligation, capillary electrophoresis, electronic microchips, “biochips,” microarrays, parallel microchips, and single-molecule arrays, as reviewed by R. F. Service Science 2006 311:1544-1546.

The markers to be used in the methods of the present invention should preferably be diagnostic of origin in order for inferences to be made about subsequent populations. Experience to date suggests that SNP markers may be ideal for mapping because the likelihood that a particular SNP allele is derived from independent origins in the extant populations of a particular species is very low. As such, SNP markers appear to be useful for tracking and assisting introgression of QTLs.

Definitions

The following definitions are provided to better define the present invention and to guide those of ordinary skill in the art in the practice of the present invention. Unless otherwise noted, terms are to be understood according to conventional usage by those of ordinary skill in the relevant art.

As used herein, a “desired bulb color” or “desirable bulb color” or “favorable bulb color” refers to an onion bulb that exhibits a commercially acceptable color such as yellow, and/or that lacks a deleterious or undesirable color, such as that conferred by complementary pinks (CP).

As used herein, the term “plant” includes plant cells, plant protoplasts, plant cells of tissue culture from which onion plants can be regenerated, plant calli, plant clumps and plant cells that are intact in plants or parts of plants such as pollen, flowers, seeds, leaves, stems, and the like.

As used herein, the term “population” means a genetically heterogeneous collection of plants that share a common parental derivation.

As used herein, the terms “variety” and “cultivar” mean a group of similar plants that by their genetic pedigrees and performance can be identified from other varieties within the same species.

As used herein, an “allele” refers to one of two or more alternative forms of a genomic sequence at a given locus on a chromosome.

A “Quantitative Trait Locus (QTL)” is a chromosomal location that encodes for at least a first allele that affects the expressivity of a phenotype.

As used herein, “repulsion” or “repulsion phase” refers to the inheritance of alleles from two genes, where the desired allele at each of the two genetic loci are found on different homologous chromosomes. This may also be referred to as a “trans” configuration of alleles.

As used herein, a “marker” means a detectable characteristic that can be used to discriminate between organisms. Examples of such characteristics include, but are not limited to, genetic markers, biochemical markers, metabolites, morphological characteristics, and agronomic characteristics.

As used herein, the term “phenotype” means the detectable characteristics of a cell or organism that can be influenced by gene expression.

As used herein, the term “genotype” means the specific allelic makeup of a plant.

As used herein, the term “introgressed,” when used in reference to a genetic locus, refers to a genetic locus that has been introduced into a new genetic background, such as through backcrossing. Introgression of a genetic locus can thus be achieved through plant breeding methods and/or by molecular genetic methods. Such molecular genetic methods include, but are not limited to, various plant transformation techniques and/or methods that provide for homologous recombination, non-homologous recombination, site-specific recombination, and/or genomic modifications that provide for locus substitution or locus conversion.

As used herein, the term “linked,” when used in the context of nucleic acid markers and/or genomic regions, means that the markers and/or genomic regions are located on the same linkage group or chromosome such that they tend to segregate together at meiosis.

As used herein, the term “denoting” when used in reference to a plant genotype refers to any method whereby a plant is indicated to have a certain genotype. This includes any means of identification of a plant having a certain genotype. Indication of a certain genotype may include, but is not limited to, any entry into any type of written or electronic medium or database whereby the plant's genotype is provided. Indications of a certain genotype may also include, but are not limited to, any method where a plant is physically marked or tagged. Illustrative examples of physical marking or tags useful in the invention include, but are not limited to, a barcode, a radio-frequency identification (RFID), a label, or the like.

Deposit Information

A deposit of onion line SYG-75-1706 has been made with the Provasoli-Guillard National Center for Marine Algae and Microbiota (NCMA), 60 Bigelow Drive, East Boothbay, Me. 04544, USA. The date of deposit for onion line SYG-75-1706 was Dec. 21, 2021. The accession number for the deposited seeds of onion line SYG-75-1706 is NCMA Accession Number 202112015. Upon issuance of a patent, all restrictions upon the deposit will be removed, and the deposit is intended to meet all of the requirements of 37 C.F.R. §§ 1.801-1.809. The deposit has been accepted under the Budapest Treaty will be maintained in the depository for a period of 30 years, 5 years after the last request, or the effective life of the patent, whichever is longer, and will be replaced if necessary during that period.

EXAMPLES

The following disclosed embodiments are merely representative of the invention which may be embodied in various forms. Thus, specific structural, functional, and procedural details disclosed in the following examples are not to be interpreted as limiting.

Example 1 Disease Mapping in Onion

A large F2:3 mapping population (approximately 620 families, selectively phenotyped across diseases) from the origin onion line SYG-75-1706/Serrana was created and phenotyped for various traits. This resulted in the identification of QTL for two important diseases in Onion: Fusarium Basal Rot (FBR) and Pink Root (PR). Several major QTL for these traits were identified (Table 1), based on phenotyping conducted in Deforest, Wis. (inoculated seedling growth chamber test for FBR and PR) and Donna, Tex. (mature plant/bulb field evaluation for PR). Most notably, FBR and PR resistance mapped in repulsion phase to a similar region on linkage group 2 (LG2), in a genetic location where a third detrimental trait for complementary pinks (mapping to position 62.5 on LG2) has also been mapped in this population. This repulsion linkage with complementary pinks was considered as a reason FBR resistance from the landrace donor Serrana has been very difficult to breed into elite onion germplasm. An effort was thus undertaken to link FBR resistance, PR resistance, and a bulb color locus in the correct phase for simultaneous introgression into breeding programs. Identified QTL from this effort are given in Table 1 below.

TABLE 1 Summary of Significant QTL Detected for Onion Disease and Color Traits. Resistance QTL Linkage donor parent Group (LG) 1-LOD 2-LOD Additive Trait allele location & position LOD interval (cM) interval (cM) Most significant marker/s effect (%) FBR Serrana LG 2: 46.9 cM 14.7 41.9-54.9 40.9-61.9 NQ0258383 6.8 FBR Serrana LG 3: 52.1 cM 4.6 38.1-60.9 34.1-86.1 NQ0257455 2.3 FBR Serrana LG 4: 44.8 cM 2.8 22.7-92.7  21.7-101.7 NQ0257799 3.3 PR SYG-75-1706 LG 2: 57.9 cM 17.7 53.9-60.9 53.5-61.9 NQ0257570 32.4 PR Serrana LG 4: 51.7 cM 5.8 46.7-56.3 38.7-60.7 NQ0345680 10.8 Bulb LG 6: 22 cM  4.6-33.6* NACEP009089369*, Color NQ0258009*, NQ0344415*, LG6 NACEP009090969* Bulb LG 4: 52.0-53.6 cM 17.0-82.8* NQ0344496*, NQ0345333* Color LG4 Bulb LG 2: 62.5-63.1 cM NQ0258453*, Color NACEP009407370/NQ0257461* LG2 *denotes significance at p-value <0.05

In addition to the above QTL study, PR resistance was mapped as a binary trait in the same population (SYG-75-1706/Serrana), as it behaves as expected for a single gene under incomplete dominant control. Binary mapping confirmed the position of PR resistance on LG2 at 56.3 cM.

Example 2 Bulb Color Mapping in Onion

Three loci controlling color in onion were mapped to LG2, LG4, and LG6. Complementary Pinks (CP), which has been reported to be controlled by two epistatic loci, was mapped to LG6 and LG2 in the same SYG-75-1706/Serrana population as described in Example 1. Complementary Pinks is a bulb color phenomenon that manifests itself in wide crosses involving elite onion lines and certain more exotic germplasm. This traditionally has created a barrier to accessing certain disease resistances, such as FBR, which is present in Brazilian onion landraces such as Serrana. The CP loci were mapped as a binary trait (yellow vs. pink bulb phenotype) to the positions of LG6: ˜22.4 cM and LG2: ˜62.5 cM. A candidate gene marker based off of the dihydroflavonol 4-reductase (DFR) gene was developed and maps to the same region on LG6 and is suspected to be the R locus controlling bulb color.

In a second, elite×elite F2 mapping population (SWL-74-14197-DH/HRL-77-5225B) segregating for bulb color (segregating for yellow, white, red, pink bulbs), two QTL were identified for bulb color. Parent SWL-74-14197 is white-bulbed, and HRL-77-5225B is red-bulbed. A QTL on LG4 at ˜53 cM appears to control the production/inhibition of color pigments, while the QTL on LG6 at ˜22.4 cM gene appears to control red pigment production.

The LG6 loci for color of both CP and bulb color appears to be the same in both populations/traits, and is likely the R locus or DFR gene on which a marker from this candidate gene for the anthocyanin biosynthesis pathway maps (NACEP009089369 and NACEP009090969, mapping to LG6: 22.3 cM and 22.6 cM, respectively).

Example 3 Cis-Coupling Linkage of FBR, PR, and Color

Within the SYG-75-1706/Serrana F2:3 population, the opportunity exists to combine FBR resistance with PR resistance, in both a North American yellow and Universal yellow onion line. With the identification of the major QTL/genes underlying color and disease resistance, phenotype and genotype information can be used to identify those recombinant families that can be used to couple the traits. Novel cis-coupling events have been identified, that have combined multiple disease resistances together onto a continuous haplotype stretch of linkage group 2. Based on the QTL information, the following haplotype is considered the most desirable configuration for obtaining a high level of FBR and PR resistance in a universal yellow bulb (i.e. a single onion line with resistance to FBR, PR, and a lack of CP). A universal yellow bulb is beneficial because it can be crossed with both North American and South American germplasm, and not produce (complementary) pink bulbs. A double recombination event on LG2 is required to obtain this phenotype (FIG. 1). A North American yellow donor is also desirable, as this germplasm will not produce CP when crossed to North American germplasm. A North America yellow is defined by a 1706 allele on LG2 (position 62-63), and only requires a single recombination on linkage group 2.

Thus, five QTL for disease resistance to FBR and PR, along with three loci controlling bulb color and/or CP were identified. One of these color loci was found to colocalize with a marker in a candidate gene from the anthocyanin biosynthesis pathway. The main effect QTL for both FBR and PR localized to a similar region on LG2, where one of the loci for complementary pinks has also been placed. These mapping results verify the suspected linkage of FBR, PR and complementary pinks, and thus why it has been difficult to combine all traits in breeding. Overall, this information provides insight into genetic control of these key onion traits, and now allows a more controlled approach to combining all traits into elite onion lines. QTL intervals and markers for these disease traits have been enabled for use in new developmental crosses and resulting segregating populations in a HAPQTL MAS approach. Further, event creation may enable the creation of novel cis-coupling linkages on LG2 to combine FBR and PR resistance in both a North American yellow and Universal Yellow bulbed donor. Recombination events combining FBR and PR in a North American yellow have also been accomplished.

Example 4 Marker Details for Marker-Assisted Selection

Based on the QTL results and intervals, markers have been provided herein for important disease resistance loci for a HAP QTL approach in new developmental crosses. As outlined in FIG. 2, onion breeding is amenable to a HAP QTL approach. Since developmental cross cages are composed of a single plant×single plant crossing pattern, parental marker genotypes for each plant going into a respective developmental cross can be obtained. Parental genotypes can be obtained using a core set of markers that are in trait regions that are considered potential targets for marker-assisted selection (MAS) (identified as “Master Loci” in FIG. 2). Therefore, per cage, a select number of the same polymorphic markers (identified on a bi-parental basis) can be used for both true F1 identification in fertile×fertile (F×F) crosses, as well as for subsequent trait MAS in segregating populations that are segregating for the trait of interest. This enables mainstream breeding workflow. Table 2 provides an example list of markers that can be used for MAS and F×F workflow. These marker sequences were used to develop Taqman® assays for use in a high throughput laboratory set up (Table 3). These markers are intended to serve as markers in the “Master Loci,” which can be used for parental genotyping in new developmental crosses, with subsequent polymorphic markers identified that can be used to identify respective F1's in F×F screening and also MAS selection in the resulting segregating generations (typically F1M1).

TABLE 2 List of markers for MAS and FxF workflow. Allele SEQ of Allele ID SYG-75- of NO Marker LG Position 1706 SERRANA DNA Sequence  1 NQ0257512 2 40.84 C G AAGGTTTGTAACCAAACTCTGACCTTAGATGTTATGATT GTGTGCACAAGCTCTACTCTT[C/G]CAGCAAAnGATAGC AATTTGGATCTCCAACCnTCCAACTTCTCTCTAATATATA TATnAA  2 NQ0345493 2 41.00 C T GCCTTCTCTTCGATTTTTCATTGACGAAGGTGATGATGC TTTGCCGAATGATCCAATGCT[T/C]TTCCATACTAAAAGA ACCTACCAGCCTAGCACTATCAAACGCAAGAGGACTCA TGGTTAT  3 NQ0345038 2 41.33 G A GCGGAAGGTCGCGATCCTCGGGGCCGCTGGGGGnATTG GGCAGCCTTTGTCACTTCTGAT[A/G]AAGCTTAATCCTCT TGTTACCAAGCTAGCTCTTTATGATATTGCTGGTACTCCT GGCGTG  4 NQ0345495 2 42.36 TTTCTTGACATTGGACGATGCGATCAAGACTACAAATAG GAGGGTTAATGCCTTGGAGAG[T/C]GTTGTCAAACCAAG GTTGGAGAATACCATTACCTATATCAAGGGAGAGCTGG ATGAGTTG  5 NQ0345022 2 42.53 C T CTCAAAACCACCACCGGTCGCATTAAGCAATGCTAGAG AAAGTATTCTGTTAGGTGCAAT[t/c]GCTGCCAACTTGCA AGCAATCATTGCTCCCATGGAGTGACCAAAAnCATGAGC TTTAGTC  6 NQ0257948 2 45.63 T C TTCCCAAGAGATTATGTACCGTGGTCCTCTAGCTCTTTTC GGTGTAGGGCTTGATGATTA[T/C]TTCCCAATGATTAATA TATATTATTAATTAACTCAGACTTTGACTGCACTATAGT GTCAC  7 NQ0258383 2 47.42 C A ATCAAATAACTTGATGGTTTCTGAGGAATCCCATGATGT CAAATCCGTTTTATTAGCTAA[A/C]GCAAATGACCAGTG CAATTTAGCCATnTCAAAATGTTGCTGTCCAAGTGCAAG TAACCCT  8 NQ0257610 2 47.47 T A TGAATCAGAAGGTTCTCTTTGTGCAATTTGTATCCCTGG CATACTATAATATACGAAATG[A/T]AATCATCTCTTATAA CCTGGTAGGACATAGGTAGAAAATCTAACTGGATGATT AGCCAAT  9 NQ0258102 2 48.51 GCTTGAAAACATAGTTAAGCAACTTTTTCCTCAAGCTGG TTGTCAATCTTGGTCACCTAG[A/G]ATGGTACAGCCGATT TGGAAAACAnTATGGGAAACTAAAAnTGCACAATTGAG AGAAGGT 10 NQ0257924 2 48.51 C C TTCCATTGCTTCTCTGCCTTTGATCTCCTTCCATTTCTTCA GCCCTACTTTGTCACGATT[C/G]TCAAAGCTAGGGTTAGT TTTACTTTTGAATTCGATTTTGAATTCTTAATTCTTATGA TTT 11 NQ0257757 2 49.32 T C TCTGGATTGAAAnTTAATGGCAGCAAGGTTGAGAAAGCT GAAGAGAAGGTGGAAAAGATG[t/c]CTGCTTTGACGCTG AAACCAGAGAAGGTTAAAGATGCATCGAAGGCTGAGGC TGTTGTCA 12 NQ0258031 2 49.79 T C AATGACAGTAAAATGGAAAATTGTTCAGGTTTGAGCCT GCGGCATCATGCCCTCCAAATA[T/C]GGAGTCCATTTTA ACAATCCTTATTTAGAATTACTTTGGTAAAnnAAGCAGA GAGATTAA 13 NQ0257938 2 50.08 C T TTTGGAATTTATAATAGGTAGTGAAAAGAAATGTCTGA ATTCAGAGCTCTGGCATGCATG[T/C]GCTGGACCTCTTGT ATGTTTGCCAACAATCGGGACTCGAGTAGTTTACTTCCC TCAAGGC 14 NQ0258282 2 50.08 C T TTCATGCAnGCATAnATTGATGTATGTTGTATGTAAACA ATAACAGTAAGTTTTGTGTTG[T/C]TATTGTAGGTGGAGG GAGAATGCGAAAGAAGCnGTTGAAGAACTGGGAGTTGC TTTGAAA 15 NQ0258343 2 50.53 C T CAATCCCACCTACACACACATTTCCACACGTTGCATTTT GTGAGTTTATATACTTTCTGT[T/C]GTTATCTTCATAGTC AACCTTGCTTATTTnAACAATAATATAAAAGTGCTTTTG GTAAAA 16 NQ0258609 2 51.49 TCTTTCGAATGTGTATTCTGAAGTGAACAGATGGGATGA TGCAGAGACGACGAGGATTAG[T/C]ATGAAGAATTGTAA TGTAGATAAATTGCCTGGATGGAGTTGTATAGAGGTTAA TGGAAAG 17 NQ0257954 2 51.64 A G CAAAnCATAGCCAACCTCTGCCAGTAAGTTCAACTACCC TCCAAGCACTACCTTTCACCT[a/g]CACTACAGCTACTTC ACCTTCTTCTACCTTCTGCCCGCAAATnCCATCACTACnC CAACC 18 NQ0257684 2 52.02 C G GGCTTATGACCAGGCAGCTTTTGCCATGAGGGGGTCGCT GGCAATTTTGAACTTCTCAGT[C/G]GAAACAGTTGTTGA ATCTTTGAGAGAAGTCAAGTGCCTAAAAGCTGGAGGAG AGTCCCCT 19 NQ0258062 2 52.07 G C GCTTCAGAAAnCCTTAAGTTTTATTTCTTCTGCATCATCA CCCCCTCTTCCCTATAGTTC[C/G]GATTACTATATTCCCG CCGTACAATTTCCGAAAnCACCTCCAAATCTTACCGTTT CTCAA 20 NQ0258384 2 52.07 C G GGCTTATGACCAGGCAGCTTTTGCCATGAGGGGnTCGCT GGCAATTTTGAACTTCTCAGT[C/G]GAAACAGTTGTTGA ATCTTTGAGAGAAGTCAAGTGCCTAAAAGCTGGAGGAG AGTCCCCT 21 NQ0257410 2 53.32 G C AGAAAnGAAGAAGAAAAACAATCGAATCCCCTACCTCT TATCAGAACATCGACCCGAACC[C/G]CACAAACCACCCA ATATTCCATTGCCTCATCAAAAATTGCCTCGCCGCCTTC ACCCAGAA 22 NQ0257277 2 53.48 T C AATTAAAAnTAAATGGATCACAGACATTAGTATGAAAG CAAGCAATATATAATTAGAATT[T/C]AGGGCTGTTTTGCT AGAAATTTGAGTTTTGCATCTTGCATTTTCAATATGCAT GTTAAAA 23 NQ0257326 2 55.14 C T CCTAACCATGGnATTTGTCCAGCTAAGATCCCCTTCAAG AGCAAGATTCTCAATATTTAG[T/C]ATTAGCGGTTTCCCA AACTACACTCAAGATCAGGGCAGGCCCTGTATACTGGG TTGCTCT 24 NQ0257570 2 55.59 C T TTAATAAACTGAAAAGGAGGATTCATTCATTCATGTTAA AGTGCATAAAATAATAGATGA[T/C]GATGACGATGATGA TTTGGTTTTCGATTTTCTTACCCTTGCAAAAGCTCGAGA AGCTGTG 25 NQ0257962 2 57.17 C T AAAnGAGAAGAGAAAAAAnCATGCCCCTTATCTTGCTAT TTATCTCATTTAATCTCTTAA[T/C]TACTGCATCCGCATCT GATGCAGAGGAATCCCTTCTTAACTGGAGATCGTCTCTT ATAAA 26 NQ0257220 2 58.38 C C ATTTCGTTCTAAGGATGGGGAGTGGCACTGTTATGTGGA TAATGCTGTCTGGTACTATGC[t/c]ATGTTATTAGTTGGTG ACAGTTATATTATCATACACTACAAAAATTGCATGGGTT AATTG 27 NQ0258453 2 62.51 G A AATTCCTCGGAGATGGATATTCTTCTCTGTAAATAGCCT CGAGATTAAATGGCCTAAATC[A/G]AAACCCATTAACAT ATGATATCCAACAAACAAAGTAGGACCCACAGATGGAA TTCCTTCA 28 NQ0257461 = 2 63.08 G A GTATTCAAGTTGGCCCACGTTTCCTCAACTTTATATTGAT NACEP009407370 GGGGAGTTTTATGGAGGGTGTGATATTACTGTTGAAGCA TACCAGAGTGGGGAACTGCAGGAAGCAATAGAAAAAG CAATGTGTTCTTAATAATGTCTCAGTTATA[A/G]CCTTCT ATGCTCCATTCATGCAAAGTTACACTTATTTATTAATTAT GTTATTATATAATATATATCTGCAATTTTCATATTTCAGA TCTGTGGATGACACTTACCATTTAGTTGCTTCTGGTGTTT ATATTTATTCTACAAAGACCATTTACTGAGTTTTCAAAT GCT 29 NQ0257692 2 69.89 G A CATCTTATAAGTAATATACTTTnAACTTTTAAGGATCTTC AAATATTCTCTTATAAATTA[a/g]AGGCCCCAAGATTAAT CCAAACTGAATTCATAAACAAnTAAAnTATCTATTTnAGT TTCT 30 NQ0258523 3 37.78 T C AAGCTGTGATTTGTGCACACTGGTGTGCAGGTGCACTGT GGATAGTAGCAGTTGTTTnAT[t/c]GGGTGATGGCTAGTTT GGACTGTGGTCATTAATGTTTAGAGGCTAAAGCAGCTG GTTGAA 31 NQ0258354 3 43.03 G A AAATTAnTTACTGTAAATTCATCAAACCCTAAnTCAATC ATGCAAGTGTGCAATTACACC[A/G]CTCAAGTCCCACCA TCATACAATACTTATCGATTTnGATGACTTTCAAAGTTTA GTGCTA 32 NQ0257455 3 45.08 G T TTTGAAGCGGAAAGATATGTCTGTTGTGGTGTCAATGCG CATAATAAAGAAAGCATCAAA[t/g]GGGTAACTACTATTT CAAAATTCATGTATTCAATCATATTGTTTATGGGCTTTC GTCGTG 33 NQ0257354 3 50.20 A A TTACTATTAATATCATCCATnTAAACTGTTACGTCATTTC GAAATTTTCATCTCACTAAA[a/c]GGTGCAAATTGATATG ATCCATCGAAAATATTTATTTAACCATCnATTTCAAACG TAGTT 34 NQ0344514 3 58.45 TTGTCCTAACCCCTAnATCATATAGTATCTGTGCTCCAAT GCCATATTCTCGTGAATCAA[T/C]AGGTAACCCCAAATC TTCGTTGGCTTCCACAGTGTCACGGCCAGCATCTTGCAG ATTATA 35 NQ0258512 3 60.87 CACTAAAGGATCTGAGCAAACAGCTGTAGAAGTTAATG ATAGTGAAAGTGATTTGAACCG[a/g]ACAATTTTCATAAA CAATATTCCATTTGATGCTGACAGTGAAGAGGTGAAAA AGAGATTC 36 NQ0345206 3 62.16 T C TGCAGATCCAAGTAAnTATGGTATTTTTAAATTGATAGC TATCGATTATTTTGGACCTTT[t/c]CTCTTTTCTGCATTTGA TGATTGCAAATGTGTTCTGATATTATTATTTTTCATATTT TTA 37 NQ0258361 4 17.0402 TTTGATGCGCCTAGGACCCCAACTTAAAGAAAGCCACTT 1 TGAACGTGAGAATGATTCTGC[a/g]TATAGTTCATCATTT AGCATCCCCnTTCACAAATAATGCAAAACTTCATTCTCA GATTGC 38 NQ0345564 4 21.73 C T CGCTTGGCATCAGTACAGTAGTTGTAAATCATGAACTTC CTCTGCACCCACCTCATTCTC[t/c]TGTAACTCACCGAATC CAACTCGTGGTTATACCAATCTGCTGGCGAAGCCGTTGA CAACA 39 NQ0257741 4 25.93 A G AnTTAAGGGAGTTTGTGTAAATATCAACAAGGATACGTA GTCCATCACTACTGTCATGGn[a/g]GTTAGACGCTCCGGC TTTGGTCAGTGAAGTTACAGGTTGAATCATGGTAGTGTC ATTCAA 40 NQ0258022 4 30.38 A A ATAAATTGGGATCAGCCAGAAAATGCTGAAACACACCT ATCAACAATTTATACCAGAATC[a/g]CTATTTACAGCCAA CATGCTAGAGGCACTTCAATAAAATGTTTAGACAGATC AGTCATTT 41 NQ0257641 4 30.56 A G AAGAATTCACTTGTTGATAGCTTCATTGTCTTGCTGGTTT TCAACTAATCTCATATTCTA[A/G]GTTGCCCTGAAATTAA ATGTAAATGGGAAAAATGTGAAAAGGCAGGTTAGAATC TTATAC 42 NQ0345175 4 32.83 A G CTCAATAGGCTTTCTTGGTGAGGCAGAGTAATCGGCATG TCTTCTTGGTGAAGCAGAGTG[A/G]TCAGTTTGCCTTCTT GGTGCAGGAGAGTACGACCTTGATGTATGGCGAGCTCT TGAAGAT 43 NQ0257421 4 35.05 A C TAGGTAAAAnTTAAAGAGAAAAGCATCGTAAATAATTA AGTCACAAAGCAGCAGGTGTGT[a/c]GAGTCTACACTAA ACCAATCCTTTAAGAAGTGTACCACTTATATACGATTAA ATGTATTA 44 NQ0257536 4 35.60 C T CCTAATTTTTCTCCTCAAATATCCCATTTGTTTCTAACTA AATCTCAAAGGAAAAGCTTT[T/C]ATTGCACGATAACGG TTAATTTAATCATTCTTCAAGCTACACAATCAGTCAATC AGTCGT 45 NQ0258247 4 37.98 G A AATTTCGCGATGCATTTGAGATTGTTGTGGAAAnTATGG TGCGTATGGTCACCAAATGAG[A/G]TATACACGATTCCT TTGTAACGATAAATGTTTGGATGACATTCAATTGTAGAA CCACTGA 46 NQ0257556 4 40.61 C T AATCTTCCAAATGGTCTAAGTTATACAACCTTAAAGAGC AGCCATATGATTCATGTATAT[t/c]GACTGAGATAAAATG GAAAGGTGCAAGTGGTGGTGGAAATTATAAACATTGCA ACCnTCA 47 NQ0257799 4 44.79 C T TTCTATTATTAATAAAAAGAATACTATTATCCTTAAATC AACAATCTTGGAATCCTTTAG[T/C]GAGGCAAAGTTACC GAGTTTCGTTTCTCTTGAACTTGTTACAATAATTACAAA ACCATAC 48 NQ0344630 4 45.78 C T CATTTTTAAATATTGGTAATATGCAAACATATTTTAAGA AAATGCCAAGTAGATGAGCCA[t/c]AGAAGATACATTCA ATGTCTCCAATGTAGATTTATTTATTTTTTTTAAAACAAG AGAATA 49 NQ0344978 4 46.32 ATGTGTTGTTAGATCTGCTTTCTAATTCTCAGGATCGAA AGTCCAATTTCTTGCTACCTT[a/t]TAAAAGAGCTACCAAC GACAGCATTCAAGCTGTTAATGAAGAAGATGACACATC ACGTCC 50 NQ0345680 4 49.45 T G GTCTCTGTATAACCAGCCTGGTGCCGCTGGAGCTCCTGG TGGGGCTGACTCAGCTGGACC[T/G]GTGCCTGGTTCGGA ACCTTCTGGAACTTCGGGTGGTAAGGGGCTGAAGATGG TGATGTTA 51 NQ0345468 4 50.90 AGGAGTTTTGGGCGACGGGAGTGAGATTGCCGTGAAGA AAGTACTGGAATCAGATCTCCA[T/C]GATGATGAATTCA AGAATGAGGTTGAGATAATCAGCAAGTTAAGGCATAGA AATCTTGTT 52 NQ0345333 4 52.02 A T AGCCACAACAATAGACCAAAATGnATTTGCTTCTTTTGC ATGACAATATAAAGATGATGC[A/T]TGCTTCTTCAACCA GGCAGCACAAGGATGACCTGTTCCATCGAAGTTATTTTT ACCACTT 53 NQ0344496 4 53.59 A G TTCATTCAGGTATTTATCATCTCTGTGGAGTGCTAGCGC ATGACCGATAAAGTCAATTGT[A/G]TTGTCATCCAATCC ATATTTTGATATGAGCTCTTTAGTAGTCACCCTTGTAAG GTCCAAT 54 NQ0344746 4 54.31 C T CCTCTGAAATTAAGATACTTTCTGGAGTAGAAACAAGTG AAGCTGCTACTGTTTCAGGTA[T/C]TGGCAGCGATTCTTC TTCGTCAGAACTATTACCTTCGGATTCTTCTTCTATTGGG TTTTC 55 NQ0344766 4 56.31 T C GAAAAAGACGACGAATCTGCATTTTCGTCCTGAAAGTT AACGATCGCCAGCCGCCTATCA[T/C]CCTCAGCTTCTTCG ACGTCGCCAAGGGAAGGTGAAGAATCGAACTCGACGTC GGAGTCTG 56 NQ0258314 4 61.48 A T TATTGGTAAAAnTAAGTACAAAATATAAGAAGATTAAG TTTAATAATCCTGGTTCCTTTA[a/t]ATTGTCCAGACTCTC CCAAGCAAAACAAGTGAGAAATTAGCATTGGCTTCAAA GTTCAAA 57  NQ0257998 4 67.55 C C GATTAGATTTCGAGAATGGAGAAAAnGGGAGTGTTGGA AGAAACAGTAAAAnGGAATAAG[t/c]GTAGGTGACCGTTG GAGATTTTnGTTTATAAAATGCTGATTTACGATTAAGCTT TAGCCA 58 NQ0257822 4 71.66 A G TGGTATACAAATACAGCTCGATATTGGTTACTAATTGCT TGATATTGGTATGGTAATACC[a/g]TAATAGCCCTAACTA GCTCTAGGTCTAAAATTTATCTTTTCATGGAAAATGACA TAGTTT 59 NQ0345700 4 76.67 G T AGATTGTGTGTTTCCTAGGATTCCTCAGTTAGCAGTTAT TGGTTTTTCGGGTAGTCTTGC[t/g]AATCTTTACACGTTTG AGATAAGGTCAATGTGGGTGGCTCATTTTCTTGATGGAG GGTTT 60 NQ0258259 4 81.48 G A GCCCTGCTCCAGAGCTTATTCTCACGACTGGACGGAGTG CCCTTTCGTGCATCCAGGCGA[A/G]AACGCGCGTCGAAG AGACTTGAAAAnGTnCGTCTACAGCTGCGTTCCGTGTCC TGAGTTC 61 NQ0344778 4 83.34 G A TATTAAAGTTTnGTCCAAAAGAAGGCGATAGTGGATCAA CTGAATATCCAACAAGTCCAT[a/g]GTTATTGTTGTTATTA CGATAATTGGATGGAGAGCTTCCACCTGGACTGCCAATT AAAGA 62 NQ0344946 4 88.52 C C TGCCTTCCAGCATAAACACCCCTGCACAAAATGCTACAT TTGTTAGGACGTGTCTTGCTA[t/c]TGAGCAAAAATACCC AAATTGGTTGACTCAGTTGCCTCCAAATGATAATAATAA TAAAAC 63 NQ0257917 4 92.84 C T AACTGTAGTACAGAAATAAACTAGTCTGAACCCATGCTT CGCACATGGAATCGCACAACA[t/c]GATTAAATAAAATTT GCATAGTACATTTCAGGTTTGCGATGTTTGACAAATACA TCAGAT 64 NQ0257378 6 4.61 G A CTATAGTGCAGAGCTTGAACTTGAACCAAAGCAGTATC ATGTAATTGCATTTGAA[a/g]nTCCAGCAGATTCTAAAAnT TTCTGTTATATTGTGCAAGCACATATGGAGATGTTAGGA A 65 NQ0344375 6 8.04 T C TCAGGTTGGAGCGGACCCGGAAAGTGCAGCCGCCTACA ATGGAGGTTTGGTTAGGAAGTT[t/c]AATGGTGGAGGAGG GACGCCGTTGATGCCGAAGAGGAAGTTTGAGACGTACA TTTTTGCG 66 NQ0344545 6 13.68 C C CAATGAGACATAGCCAATTGGCATTTCGCAGCACTGAC CTAAAATGGATTCATAATCAAA[t/c]CCTTCTAAAGGCAA ACCATTCAAACTTCTATTAGTGATTCTCTTTACGGCCTCA CGTCGA 67 NQ0345400 6 17.69 C T ACAATTGCTATCTTCGTTTTTACATnACCGTTTGGTGGTC GATAACATAGATGAATGAAA[t/c]GAGGAGGATTTGATG AAGCAGCAGCAACACCTAAATATGAACCCATCTTCAAT TCCGTGC 68 NACEP009089369 6 22.28 TGTGGATTAGCTACTAAAAATTATACATGATTTCAGGAA ATGAAGCACATTATTCAATCATAAAGCAAGCTCAGCTG GTTCACCTGGAT[TAGGCCTGTCAAAATTCACTAAACCC ATTTAACCCTACCCTCTTAACCTTATTTTAGACAGGCCG GGCCTTCTCTGAATTCTTTCCTTCGCAACCCGTTTAACCT CTTACTCTTCATACGACCCGTTTAACGTTGTTGC/GACTT GTGTGAAGCACACATTCTGCTGCTGAACCATCCTAAAGC GGAAGGGCGATACATATGCTCTTCTCATGACGTGACAAT TTACGATATGGCTAAAATGATTAGGCAGAACTACCCTCA ATATTACATTCCTCAAC]GACTC 69 NQ0258009 6 22.44 T C AGATATAACTACTTTTGGATTATGGGCTTATGATGCTGC TTTTGCCTTAGCAATGGCTAC[T/C]GAGTCAGCTCAGCCA GCTTATAACTATAGTAATGAnGTTGCTAACGGTAATTTA ATGAAG 70 NQ0344415 6 22.44 C T AGAAATTACAGTTGATAAAGTAGCCGATGAAGGCAATC TTACACTAGCACAAAGTTTTAG[T/C]GATAACCACAGTG ATAGGGATTCAAGAAAAnCACTGGCTCACTTAACAATG AGCAAATCT 71 NACEP009090969 6 22.65 GCATTCCATAACCACCATTCAACATGCACTCCACTGGCA TGCAATATGTTATTANATTTTATGATCAAG[C/T]ACTTTC ATCAGCTGTTACAAGTTGTGACTGTTCGCTGCTAATAAC TTAATAATTCTGTCACTACAACAAAT 72 NQ0344386 6 26.52 TGGTGTTTCTGGAGCTGAAGCATTTGGAGAAGTATTCAC ATTGAAGGAAnTAGGCATTTG[A/C]ACAGTGCCATAGCA ATTTGGCTCAGAACCAGnCGCACAGATCAAAGGATTTCC TACAATG 73 NQ0345529 6 31.49 TGACTCTATACTAGATGATGAGTTCTCCTTCTCCAACCT CAACTTATCACATCTGCTATT[t/c]TGACTAACATTCATTG CATCACTTCTGCTTCTTTGAACTCTTTGTTGCAATCCAAC ATTC 74 NQ0345734 6 33.62 ATGGCTTGAAnGGTCGCTCATCAnCCCCCAGCGGTCCGA CCACTCTATATCCAATCTCCT[c/g]CGCCTCGATTATCTTC TCCTCTTTACTCTTCCCACTCACTTTAAACTTCCTCACGG ATCC

TABLE 3 List of markers for Taqman ® assays. Posi- Probe VIC Probe FAM Primer F Primer R Marker LG tion Trait Sequence Sequence Sequence  Sequence NQ0257512 2 40.8 FBR AGCTCTACTCTTCCAG CTCTACTCTTGCAGCAA TTTGTAACCAAACTCT GGTTGGAGATCCAA CAAA  A  GACCTTAGATGTT ATTGCTATC  (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 116) (SEQ ID NO: 157) (SEQ ID NO: 198) NO: 75) NQ0345493 2 41 FBR ATGATCCAATGCTTTT TGATCCAATGCTCTTCC GACGAAGGTGATGAT GCTAGGCTGGTAGGT CCAT  AT  GCTTTGC  TCTTTTAGT  (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 117) (SEQ ID NO: 158) (SEQ ID NO: 199) NO: 76) NQ0345038 2 41.3 FBR TCACTTCTGATAAAG ACTTCTGATGAAGCTT CGGAAGGTCGCGATCC GAGCTAGCTTGGTAA CTT  (SEQ ID NO: 118) TC  CAAGAGGATT  (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 159) (SEQ ID NO: 200) NO: 77) NQ0345495 2 42.4 FBR CCTTGGAGAGTGTTG TTGGAGAGCGTTGTC GGACGATGCGATCAA GGTAATGGTATTCTC TC  (SEQ ID NO: 119) GACTACAAAT  CAACCTTGGT  (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 160) (SEQ ID NO: 201) NO: 78) NQ0257948 2 45.6 FBR ATCATTGGGAAATAA CATTGGGAAGTAATCAT GTCCTCTAGCTCTTTTC CACTATAGTGCAGTC TCAT  (SEQ ID NO: 120) GGTGTAG  AAAGTCTGAGT  (SEQ ID (SEQ ID NO: 161) (SEQ ID NO: 202) NO: 79) NQ0258383 2 47.4 FBR CTGGTCATTTGCTTTA TGGTCATTTGCGTTAGCT GAATCCCATGATGTCA GCACTTGGACAGCA GCT  (SEQ ID NO: 121) AATCCGTTT  ACATTTTGA  (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 162) (SEQ ID NO: 203) NO: 80) NQ0257610 2 47.5 FBR ATACGAAATGAAATC ATACGAAATGTAATCAT TGTGCAATTTGTATCC TTAGATTTTCTACCT ATC  C  CTGGCATA  ATGTCCTACCAGGTT (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 122) (SEQ ID NO: 163) (SEQ ID NO: 204) NO: 81) NQ0258102 2 48.5 FBR TTGGTCACCTAGAAT TGGTCACCTAGGATGGT CTTTTTCCTCAAGCTG ACCTTCTCTCAATTG GGTA  A  GTTGTCAAT  TGCA  (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 123) (SEQ ID NO: 164) (SEQ ID NO: 205) NO: 82) NQ0257924 2 48.5 FBR CTAGCTTTGAGAATC CTAGCTTTGACAATCGT TCCATTTCTTCAGCCC AAATCATAAGAATTA GT  (SEQ ID NO: 124) TACTTTGTC  AGAATTCAAAATCG (SEQ ID (SEQ ID NO: 165) AATTCAAAAG   NO: 83) (SEQ ID NO: 206) NQ0258031 2 49.8 FBR ATGGACTCCATATTT ATGGACTCCGTATTTG GAGCCTGCGGCATCAT TTTACCAAAGTAATT G  (SEQ ID NO: 125) G  CTAAATAAGGATTGT (SEQ ID (SEQ ID NO: 166) T   NO: 84) (SEQ ID NO: 207) NQ0257938 2 50.1 FBR TCCAGCACATGCATG CAGCGCATGCATG  AGAAATGTCTGAATTC GAGTCCCGATTGTTG (SEQ ID  (SEQID NO: 126) AGAGCTCTGG  GCAAAC  NO: 85) (SEQ ID NO: 167) (SEQ ID NO: 208) NQ0258282 2 50.1 FBR CCACCTACAATAACA CACCTACAATAGCAACA ATTGATGTATGTTGTA CAAAGCAACTCCCA ACAC  C  TGTAAACAATAACAGT GTTCTTCAAC  (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 127) AAGT  (SEQ ID NO: 209) NO: 86) (SEQ ID NO: 168) NQ0258343 2 50.5 FBR ACTTTCTGTTGTTATC TTCTGTCGTTATCTTC ACATTTCCACACGTTG TTTTACCAAAAGCAC TTC  (SEQ ID NO: 128) CATTTTGT  TTTTATATTATTGTT (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 169) (SEQ ID NO: 210) NO: 87) NQ0258609 2 51.5 FBR ACAATTCTTCATACTA AATTCTTCATGCTAATCC GAACAGATGGGATGA CTCTATACAACTCCA ATCC  (SEQ ID NO: 129) TGCAGAGA  TCCAGGCAAT  (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 170) (SEQ ID NO: 211) NO: 88) NQ0257684 2 52 FBR CTTCTCAGTCGAAAC TTCTCAGTGGAAACAG GGGTCGCTGGCAATTT GCTTTTAGGCACTTG AG  (SEQ ID NO: 130) TGAA  ACTTCTCTCA  (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 171) (SEQ ID NO: 212) NO: 89) NQ0258062 2 52.1 FBR CCCTATAGTTCCGATT CCTATAGTTCGGATTAC CTGCATCATCACCCCC CGGAAATTGTACGGC ACT  T  TCTT  GGGAATAT  (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 131) (SEQ ID NO: 172) (SEQ ID NO: 213) NO: 90) NQ0258384 2 52.1 FBR CTTCTCAGTCGAAAC TTCTCAGTGGAAACAG CTTATGACCAGGCAGC GCTTTTAGGCACTTG AG  (SEQ ID NO: 132) TTTTGC  ACTTCTCTCA  (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 173) (SEQ ID NO: 214) NO: 91) NQ0257410 2 53.3 FBR CCGAACCCCACAAAC CGAACCGCACAAAC CCCCTACCTCTTATCA GGCAATTTTTGATGA (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 133) GAACATCGA  GGCAATGGAA  NO: 92) (SEQ ID NO: 174) (SEQ ID NO: 215) NQ0257277 2 53.5 FBR ACAGCCCTAAATTCT AGCCCTGAATTCTA  TCACAGACATTAGTAT GCAAGATGCAAAAC A (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 134) GAAAGCAAGCA  TCAAATTTCTAGCA NO: 93) (SEQ ID NO: 175) (SEQ ID NO: 216) NQ0257326 2 55.1 PR ACCGCTAATACTAAA CGCTAATGCTAAATAT CCCCTTCAAGAGCAAG GCCCTGATCTTGAGT TAT  (SEQ ID NO: 135) ATTCTCA  GTAGTTTGG  (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 176) (SEQ ID NO: 217) NO: 94) NQ0257570 2 55.6 PR CATCGTCATCATCATC CATCGTCATCGTCATCT GAGGATTCATTCATTC GCAAGGGTAAGAAA T  (SEQ ID NO: 136) ATGTTAAAGTGCAT ATCGAAAACCA  (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 177) (SEQ ID NO: 218) NO: 95) NQ0257962 2 57.2 PR CGGATGCAGTAATTA CGGATGCAGTAGTTAAG CATGCCCCTTATCTTG CAGTTAAGAAGGGA AGA  A  CTATTTATCTCA  TTCCTCTGCAT  (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 137) (SEQ ID NO: 178) (SEQ ID NO: 219) NO: 96) NQ0258453 2 62.5 Color TGTTAATGGGTTTTGA AATGGGTTTCGATTTAG GATATTCTTCTCTGTA TGGGTCCTACTTTGT TTTAG  (SEQ ID NO: 138) AATAGCCTCGAGATT TTGTTGGAT  (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 179) (SEQ ID NO: 220) NO: 97) NACEP009407370/ 2 63.1 Color AGCATAGAAGGTTAT CATAGAAGGCTATAACT CTGCAGGAAGCAATA AACATAATTAATAAA NQ0257461 AACTG  G  GAAAAAGCAA  TAAGTGTAACTTTGC (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 139) (SEQ ID NO: 180) ATGAA  NO: 98) (SEQ ID NO: 221) NQ0257641 4 30.6 PNBR ATTTCAGGGCAACTT TCAGGGCAACCTAGAAT GCTTCATTGTCTTGCT CCTGCCTTTTCACAT AGAAT  (SEQ ID NO: 140) GGTTTTCAA  TTTTCCCATT  (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 181) (SEQ ID NO: 222) NO: 99) NQ0345175 4 32.8 PNBR TGAAGCAGAGTGATC AAGCAGAGTGGTCAGTT GCAGAGTAATCGGCAT GTCGTACTCTCCTGC AGTT  (SEQ ID NO: 141) GTCTTCTT  ACCAA  (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 182) (SEQ ID NO: 223) NO: 100) NQ0257536 4 35.6 PNBR TCGTGCAATAAAAGC TCGTGCAATGAAAGC CCCATTTGTTTCTAAC TGATTGACTGATTGT (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 142) TAAATCTCAAAGGAA GTAGCTTGAAGA NO: 101) AA  (SEQ ID NO: 224) (SEQ ID NO: 183) NQ0258247 4 38 PNBR CACCAAATGAGATAT CACCAAATGAGGTATAC CGATGCATTTGAGATT GTCATCCAAACATTT ACAC  AC  GTTGTGGAA  ATCGTTACAAAGGA (SEQ ID (SEQ ID NO: 143) (SEQ ID NO: 184) A   NO: 102) (SEQ ID NO: 225) NQ0257799 4 44.8 PNBR CTTTGCCTCACTAAA TTTGCCTCGCTAAAGG TAAAAAGAATACTATT AGTTCAAGAGAAAC GG  (SEQ ID NO: 144) ATCCTTAAATCAACAA GAAACTCGGTAA (SEQ ID  TCT  (SEQ ID NO: 226) NO: 103) (SEQ ID NO: 185) NQ0345680 4 49.4 Color CAGGCACAGGTCCAG AGGCACCGGTCCAG CGCTGGAGCTCCTGGT CACCCGAAGTTCCAG (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 145) G  AAGGTT  NO: 104) (SEQ ID NO: 186) (SEQ ID NO: 227) NQ0345468 4 50.9 Color TCAGATCTCCATGAT AGATCTCCACGATGATG ATTGCCGTGAAGAAA GCCTTAACTTGCTGA GATG  (SEQ ID NO: 146) GTACTGGAA  TTATCTCAACCT (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 187) (SEQ ID NO: 228) NO: 105) NQ0345333 4 52 Color AAGATGATGCATGCT AAAGATGATGCTTGCTT AGCCACAACAATAGA CCTTGTGCTGCCTGG TC  C  CCAAAATG  TTGA  (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 147) (SEQ ID NO: 188) (SEQ ID NO: 229) NO: 106) NQ0344746 4 54.3 Color TCGCTGCCAATACCT CGCTGCCAGTACCTGA GGAGTAGAAACAAGT TCCGAAGGTAATAGT GA  (SEQ ID NO: 148) GAAGCTGCTA  TCTGACGAAGA  (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 189) (SEQ ID NO: 230) NO: 107) NQ0345071 5  7.1 PNBR CAAGAAATGAGCAGT AAGAAATGAGCGGTAAT AGGAAGTTGAAAAGG CTTTTTGAACCATTT AATAT  AT  CCATTAACGA  CTTTTCTCCTGTCT (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 149) (SEQ ID NO: 190) (SEQ ID NO: 231) NO: 108) NQ0345144 5 11 PNBR CCGCCATAGCTCTAA CGCCATGGCTCTAA CGAGTGCTCCCTCATG CCTACCAAAACGCCA (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 150) TATTTGG  AAGAATTACA  NO: 109) (SEQ ID NO: 191) (SEQ ID NO: 232) NQ0258331 5 19 PNBR TGAAAGTGTGTCATC AAAGTGTGTCGTCAATT CCTTGAGTACCTAGGT TCTTGAATCTCTCTG AATTA  A  GACTATCGT  TTAATAGTTCAAATC (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 151) (SEQ ID NO: 192) GTG  NO: 110) (SEQ ID NO: 233) NACEP009089369 6 22.3 R CCTGGATTAGGCCTG CCTGGATGACTTGTGT AAGAGTAAGAGGTTA AATTATACATGATTT locus; (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 152) AACGGGTTGC  CAGGAAATGAAGCA color NO: 111) (SEQ ID NO: 193), C  ATCATTTTAGCCATAT (SEQ ID NO: 234) CGTAAATTGTCA   (SEQ ID NO: 239US) NQ0258009 6 22.4 R CAATGGCTACTGAGT AATGGCTACCGAGTCAG GCTTATGATGCTGCTT TCATTACTATAGTTA locus CAG  (SEQ ID NO: 153) TTGCCTTAG  TAAGCTGGCTGAG (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 194) (SEQ ID NO: 235) NO: 112) NQ0344415 6 22.4 R ACTGTGGTTATCACT CTGTGGTTATCGCTAAA CGATGAAGGCAATCTT GCTCATTGTTAAGTG locus AAAA  A  ACACTAGCA  AGCCAGTG  (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 154) (SEQ ID NO: 195) (SEQ ID NO: 236) NO: 113) NACEP009090969  6 22.6 R CTGATGAAAGTGCTT CTGATGAAAGTACTTGA ACTCCACTGGCATGCA AGCGAACAGTCACA locus; GATC  TC  ATATGTTAT  ACTTGTAACA  color (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 155) (SEQ ID NO: 196) (SEQ ID NO: 237) NO: 114) NACEP009112570 ANS GAGTTACCTCTTAGCT TTGGAGCATACCCTA AGTAGAAATAAGTGA TGGTTTGAGCTTGTT color (SEQ ID  (SEQ ID NO: 156) AGAATATTGATGTG GGTTTGGAG  NO: 115) (SEQ ID NO: 197), (SEQ ID NO: 238) TACAATATGATACAGA AAATCAGAG  (SEQ ID NO: 240US)

Example 5 Onion Fusarium Basal Rot (FBR) LG2 QTL Fine Mapping

F3 bulbs were obtained from the original SYG-75-1706/Serrana-FBR mapping population described in Example 1. Segregating F2:3 families were chosen based on desired genotype data in the QTL region for FBR on LG2, on order to narrow the major effect FBR QTL region from >12 cM to less than 5 cM. The F2 genotype in the LG2 QTL region of the selected F3 families is depicted in Table 4. As seen in Table 4, the F2:3 segpop families were chosen to have a recombination in the FBR QTL LG2 region, and heterozygous (shaded) for a “stair-stepped” section of the QTL region in the F2 generation. The heterozygous region in the F2 individuals was chosen such that F3 individuals (bulbs) homozygous for the favorable allele and homozygous for the unfavorable allele could be selected for further experimentation in the F3 generation to enable fine mapping.

TABLE 4 Genotype depiction of the six F2 plants selected for FBR LG2 QTL fine mapping. F3 bulbs from each of these families were genotyped with markers in the LG2 QTL region as subsequently described. NQ- NQ- NQ- NQ- NQ- NQ- NQ- NQ- NQ- NQ- NQ- NQ- NQ- NQ- NQ- NQ- NQ- 0345038 0257827 0257948 0258383 0258005 0257848 0258031 0258609 0257954 0257684 0258384 0257410 0257277 0257326 0257570 0258453 0257461 LG 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 Pos 41.3 42.4 45.6 47.4 49.2 49.8 49.8 51.5 51.6 52 52.1 53.3 53.5 55.1 55.6 62.5 63.1 Pedigree Source FBRR       FBRR      FBRR FBRR FBRR FBRR FBRR FBRR FBRR FBRR FBRR FBRR FBRR PRR PRR color color SYG-75- HCH0351- GG CC TT CC GG CC TT CC AA CC CC GT TT CC CC GG GG 1706 S1 RV_SYG- HCS0063 AG CT CT AC CG CT CT CT AG CC CC GG TT CC CC GG GG 75-1706/ SERRANA- FBR: 01.0032. RV_SYG- HCS0333 AA TT CC AC CG CT CT CT AG CC CC GG TT CC CC GG AG 75-1706/ SERRANA- FBR: 01.0167. RV_SYG- HCS0367 AG CT CT CG CT CT CT AG CG CG GG TT CC CC GG GG 75-1706/ SERRANA- FBR: 01.0001. RV_SYG- HCS0293 AG CT CT AC CG CT CT CT AG CG CG CG CT CC CC GG GG 75-1706/ SERRANA- FBR: 01.0147. RV_SYG- HCS0591 AG CT CT AC CG CT CT CC AA CC CC GG TT CC CC GG GG 75-1706/ SERRANA- FBR: 01.0113. RV_SYG- HCS0659 AG CT TT CC GG CC TT CC AA CC CC GG TT CC CC GG GG 75-1706/ SERRANA- FBR: 01.0167.

Based on the genotypes in the LG2 QTL of the F3 bulbs from each of the six families in Table 4, bulb selections for the homozygous favorable and unfavorable alleles were made. For example, for the segregating population RV_SYG-75-1706/SERRANA-FBR: 01.0113. cross, ten F3 bulbs that were fixed homozygous for the Serrana allele at and to the left of position 49.8 on LG2 and ten F3 bulbs that were fixed homozygous for the SYG-75-1706 allele across the whole FBR QTL region were selected (see Table 5). The selected bulbs (one separate cage for each allele “group”) for each of the 6 segregating populations were transplanted into 16 head cages in a cage field north of Woodland in December. The F3 bulb selections for favorable and unfavorable alleles at each “stair step” are separately massed to produce seed fixed for only the recombinant QTL region of interest, while keeping the rest of the genome heterogeneous (reducing the chance of inbreeding depression and background QTL effects).

The massed seed is harvested and tested for FBR. For each of the 6 families, a statistical difference between the two entries that represent the two massed allele “groups” of that family allows determination of whether the FBR resistance is located with the respective genetic interval for which that F3 family is segregating.

TABLE 5 Example of F3 bulbs selected for massing (family RV_SYG-75-1706/SERRANA- FBR:01.0113.). NQ0345038 NQ0257948 NQ0258383 NQ0258031 NQ0258609 NQ0257684 NQ0258384 NQ0257410 NQ0257277 NQ0257570 NACEP009407370 Chr 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 Pos 41 46 47 50 51 52 52 53 53 56 63 Trait FBRR FBRR FBRR FBRR FBRR FBRR FBRR FBRR FBRR PRR color QTL: SYG-75-1706 (HCH0351- F3 plant GG 7 CC TT CC CC CC GG TT CC GG S1) ID RV_SYG-75-1706/SERRANA- 353 AA CC AA CC CC CC CC GG TT CC GG FBR:01.0113. RV_SYG-75-1706/SERRANA- 358 AA CC AA CC CC CC CC GG TT CC GG FBR:01.0113. RV_SYG-75-1706/SERRANA- 359 AA CC AA CC CC CC CC GG TT CC GG FBR:01.0113. RV_SYG-75-1706/SERRANA- 375 AA CC AA CC CC CC CC GG TT CC GG FBR01.0113. RV_SYG-75-1706/SERRANA- 395 AA CC AA CC CC CC CC GG TT CC GG FBR:01.0113. RV_SYG-75-1706/SERRANA- 397 AA CC AA CC CC CC CC GG TT CC GG FBR:01.0113. RV_SYG-75-1706/SERRANA- 402 AA CC AA CC CC CC CC GG TT CC GG FBR01.0113. RV_SYG-75-1706/SERRANA- 408 AA CC AA CC CC CC CC GG TT CC GG FBR:01.0113. RV_SYG-75-1706/SERRANA- 413 AA CC AA CC CC CC CC GG TT CC GG FBR:01.0113. RV_SYG-75-1706/SERRANA- 415 AA CC AA CC CC CC CC GG TT CC GG FBR01.0113. RV_SYG-75-1706/SERRANA- 351 GG TT CC TT CC CC CC GG TT CC GG FBR01.0113. RV_SYG-75-1706/SERRANA- 389 GG TT CC TT CC CC CC GG TT CC GG FBR01.0113. RV_SYG-75-1706/SERRANA- 390 GG TT CC TT CC CC CC GG TT CC GG FBR01.0113. RV_SYG-75-1706/SERRANA- 405 GG TT CC TT CC CC CC GG TT CC GG FBR01.0113. RV_SYG-75-1706/SERRANA- 425 GG TT CC TT CC CC CC GG TT CC GG FBR:01.0113. RV_SYG-75-1706/SERRANA- 440 GG TT CC TT CC CC CC GG TT CC GG FBR01.0113. RV_SYG-75-1706/SERRANA- 445 GG TT CC TT CC CC CC GG TT CC GG FBR:01.0113. RV_SYG-75-1706/SERRANA- 448 GG TT CC TT CC CC CC GG TT CC GG FBR01.0113. RV_SYG-75-1706/SERRANA- 451 GG TT CC TT CC CC CC GG TT CC GG FBR01.0113. RV_SYG-75-1706/SERRANA- 496 GG TT CC TT CC CC CC GG TT CC GG FBR:01.0113.

Subsequently, 29 additional F2:3 families have been chosen from the SYG-75-1706/Serrana population for further fine mapping of the FBR QTL on LG2, as well as validation of the QTLs for FBR on LG3 and LG4.

The F3 families for the FBR QTL fine mapping project represent more coverage of the FBR QTL region on LG2, to produce individuals that allow further narrowing of the FBR QTL region on LG2.

The F3 families for the FBR QTL validation are represented by families that are fixed for the Serrana favorable alleles in the major FBR QTL region on LG2, but are heterozygous for the minor QTL regions on LG3 and LG4. Similar selection for individuals homozygous for various combinations of both alleles for the minor QTL (given that LG2 QTL is fixed), as described above, produce massed seed entries that can be trialed to determine if the minor QTL provide significant additional resistance to FBR.

Example 6 Onion FBR-PR Resistance Trait Coupling Project

Similar to the fine mapping project, coupling of FBR and PR resistance could be accomplished through a 2-tier approach using available F3 bulbs, as well as planting F3 seed sources of genetic material from the SYG-75-1706/Serrana population. Bulbs are sampled to identify individuals that combine the favorable alleles for FBR QTL from Serrana on LG2 with the favorable alleles for PR from SYG-75-1706 on LG2, in a North American yellow bulb (or Universal Yellow).

For the steckling/seed source approach, seven F3 families were selected based on F2 plant marker data to have a favorable combination of alleles in the LG2 trait region and LG6 color QTL region, as well as a favorable phenotypic disease score. The F3 seed was planted and resulting F3 plants genotyped with Taqman markers that encompassed the main QTL for FBR on LG2, minor QTL for FBR on LG3 & LG4, PR QTL region on LG2, plus color QTL regions on LG2 and LG6. Recombinant individuals from each F3 family were identified to contain as much of the full complement of traits as possible in either a fixed or heterozygous state, and “like” individuals were placed together in a head cage for future massing.

Table 6 presents representative genotypes of the F2 families that were initially selected for follow-up, and the selections of the resulting F3 plants that were selected to have desirable recombination for combining the traits. Markers to indicate the favorable alleles for FBR resistance (FBRR) on LG2 were used as the main criteria, followed by favorable alleles for PR resistance (PRR) on LG2 and lastly the favorable color alleles, ideally the Universal Yellow, which combines the Serrana color allele on LG2 and the SYG-75-1706 color allele on LG6; however, obtaining a North American yellow was also an objective, which requires a SYG-75-1706 color allele for both LG2 and LG6 color regions/QTL. The massed seed from these cages is harvested and trialed to verify the traits have been coupled. In the cases of Universal Yellow FBR+PR combinations, this involves a double recombination on LG2 and therefore these require one additional generation of MAS to fix all traits.

TABLE 6 Genotypic and phenotypic information for a majority of the F2 families selected for trait coupling in subsequent F3 (and beyond) generations. NQ NQ NQ NQ NQ NQ NQ NQ NQ NQ NQ NQ NQ NQ PR FBR 0345038 0257948 0258383 0258031 0258609 0257684 0258384 0257410 0257277 0257326 0257570 0258453 0258009 0344415 Score score LG  2  2  2  2  2  2  2  2  2  2  2  2   6  6 Donna, Deforest, TX WI % mortal- ity Pos 41.3 45.6 47.4 49.8 51.5 52 52.1 53.3 53.5 55.1 55.6 62.5 22.4 22.4 Desired   FBRR FBRR FBRR FBRR FBRR FBRR FBRR FBRR FBR-PR PRR PRR COLOR color color Haplotype - Universal Desired   FBRR FBRR FBRR FBRR FBRR FBRR FBRR FBRR FBR-PR PRR PRR COLOR color color Haplotype - NA Yellow: Parent:   GG TT CC TT CC CC CC GG TT CC CC GG TT CC PRR 94.8 SYG-75-1706 (HCH0351- F2  AG CT AA CC TT GG GG CC CC CT CT AG TT CC seg 75.8 pro- genitor plant, HCS0103 Cage  F3   AA CC AA CC TT GG GG CC CC CC CC GG TT CC 1: selec- tions, FBR-PR- NA  Yellow Cage  F3   AA CC AA CC TT GG GG CC CC CC CC AG TT CC 2: selec- tions, FBR-  PR-seg Univ  Yellow F2   AG CT AC CT CT CG CG CG CT CT AA CC seg 69.2 pro- genitor plant, HCS0149 Cage  F3   AA CC AA CC TT GG GG CC CC CT CT AA TT CC 3: selec-   tions, FBR-seg PRR- Univ Yellow Cage  F3   AG CT AC CT CT CG CG CG CT CC CC AA TT CC 4: selec- tions, seg FBR PRR-  Univ Yellow F2   AA CC AA CC CT CG CG GG TT CC CC GG CT CT PRR 73.9 pro- genitor plant, HCS0537 Cage  F3   AA CC AA CC TT GG GG GG TT CC CC GG TT CC 5: selec- tions, FBR-  PRR-NA Yellow F2   AG CT AC CT CT CG CG CG CT CT CT AA CC CT seg 70.6 pro- genitor plant, HCS0189 Cage  F3   AG CT AC CT CT CG CG CG CT CC CC AA CC CT 6: selec-  tions, seg FBR PRR-seg  Univ Yellow Cage  F3   AA CC AA CC TT GG GG CC CC ** CT AA CC CC 6: selec-  tions, FBR-seg  PRR- Univ Yellow F2   AG CT AC CT CT CG CG CG CT CT CT AA TT CC seg 87.4 pro- genitor plant, HCS0275 Cage  F3   AA CC AA CC TT GG GG CC CC CT CT AA TT CC 7: selec- tions, FBR-seg  PRR- Univ Yellow Cage  F3   AG CT AC CT CT CG CG CG CT CC CC AA TT CC 8: selec- tions, seg FBR PRR-  Univ Yellow F2   AG CT AC CC TT GG GG CC CC CT CT AG CT CT seg 73.9 pro- genitor plant, HCS0723 Cage  F3   GG TT CC CC TT GG GG CC CC TT CC GG TT CC 9: selec-  tions, FBR  trunc- PRR-NA yellow Cage  F3   AA CC AA CC TT GG GG CC CC TT CT AG CT ** 10: selec-   tions, FBR-seg PRR-seg color Cage  F3   GG TT CC CC TT GG GG CC CC TT CC AG ** CT 11: selec- tions, FBR   trunc- PRR-seg color

Shown are the F2 genotypes for the QTL regions of interest, and below each F2 progenitor is a representative genotype of the (several) F3 progeny that were selected to mass in cages for creation of a trait donor. The desired haplotype was a North American or Universal Yellow with FBR+PR resistance. Several cages provide a North America yellow FBR+PR donor and several cages provide a Universal Yellow FBR+PR donor (requiring 1 round of additional MAS).

Example 7

Leading germplasm event donors possessing necessary gene combinations to attain both Universal Yellow and North American Yellow donors that all have combined FBR and PR resistance, made possible through recombination in the target region of Linkage Group 02 have been made (Table 7). The event donors in this table are a subset of selections as depicted in Table 4 and Table 6 previously described. The derivation from the Table 4 & 6 families can be identified in the current table through the Progenitor Source ID (prefixes “HCS”). Pathology tests indicate that all of the 2 Universal donors and 3 North American Yellow donors possess high levels of FBR resistance, significantly equivalent to the resistant parent Serrana. Similarly, bulb color and/or pink root resistance have been phenotypically confirmed from previous generation data to be fixed favorable for several of these donors, as indicated by “YELLOW” or “RESIST” in the respective table columns. In all cases, the desired recombination events (single or double recombination events as required for the LG02 region in the North American or Universal yellow donors, respectively) have been generated, and FBR resistance has been fixed and phenotypically confirmed. Two of the North American Yellow donor events are fixed for the desired LG02 and LG06 configuration. Genotypic regions segregating in this data set (denoted as “SEG” in table) are being fixed in one more breeding cycle, with molecular markers indicated, to obtain fixed color loci configuration or PR resistance.

TABLE 7 Genotypic and phenotypic information for leading germplasm event donors. Previous Generation Pink Root Current Previous Resis- Generation Cage Genera- tance FBR Path % Designation tion Field Mortality (Pro- Target: Phenotype Test - Avg Identi- genitor Current Bulb Donna, (February fier Source ID) Status Color Texas 2014) NQ0345038 NQ0257948 NQ0258383 NQ0258031 NQ0258609 NQ0257684 LG: 2 2 2 2 2 2 Position: 41.3   45.6 47.4 49.8 51.5 52.0 QTL/Trait  FBRR FBRR FBRR FBRR FBRR FBRR Regions: Target  Serrana Serrana Serrana Serrana Serrana Serrana Haplotype- Universal Yellow: Target  Serrana Serrana Serrana Serrana Serrana Serrana Haplotype- North American Yellow: Serrana REH0001 Parent 1  YELLOW SUSC 49 AA CC AA CC TT GG (Serrana) SYG-75- Parent 2  YELLOW RESIST 74 GG TT CC TT CC CC 1706 (SYG-75-1706) Universal  A 660-01-13 Universal YELLOW SEG 52 AA CC AA CC TT GG Yellow: (HCS0103) Yellow: IR/HR FBR FBRR + with QTL PRP + seg recombinant LG02 Universal Yellow Universal  B 665-01-13 Universal  YELLOW SEG 46 AA CC AA CC TT GG Yellow: (HCS0275) Yellow: IR/HR FBR FBRR + with QTL sea PRR + recombinant Universal Yellow NA yellow:   C 659-01-13 NA Yellow:  YELLOW SEG 47 ** CC AA CC TT GG IR/HR FBR (HCS0103) FBRR + with QTL PRR + recombinant NA yellow NA yellow:   D 668-01-13 NA Yellow;  SEG SEG 44 AA CC AA CC TT GG HR FBR, (HCS0723) FBRR + confirm HR PRR + PR In  seg LG06 NA Texas test yellow NA yellow:  E 686-01-13 NA Yellow:  YELLOW RESIST 50 AA CC AA CC TT CC HR FBR, (HCS0333) FBRR + PRR +  HR = PR NA yellow LSD(0.05) 14.2 Cage Designation (Pro- Target: Identi- genitor Current NQ0257461 = fier Source ID) Status NQ0258384 NQ0257410 NQ0257277 NQ0257326 NQ0257570 NQ0258453 NACEP009407370 NQ0258009 NQ0344415 LG: 2 2 2 1 2 2 2 6 6 Position: 52.1 53.3 53.5 55.1 55.6 62.5 63.1 22.4 22.4 QTL/Trait  FBRR FBRR FBRR- PRR PRR PRR- COLOR COLOR COLOR Regions: PRR COLOR Target  Serrana Serrana 1706 1706 Serrana Serrana 1706 1706 Haplotype- Universal Yellow: Target  Serrana Serrana 1706 1706 1706 1706 1706 1706 Haplotype- North American Yellow: Serrana REH0001 Parent 1  GG CC CC TT TT AA AA CC TT (Serrana) SYG-75- Parent 2  CC GG TT CC CC GG GG TT CC 1706 (SYG-75-1706) Universal  A 660-01-13 Universal GG CC CC CC CC SEG  SEG TT CC Yellow: (HCS0103) Yellow: IR/HR FBR FBRR + with QTL PRP + seg recombinant LG02 Universal Yellow Universal  B 665-01-13 Universal  GG CC CC SEG SEG AA AA TT CC Yellow: (HCS0275) Yellow: IR/HR FBR FBRR + with QTL sea PRR + recombinant Universal Yellow NA yellow:   C 659-01-13 NA Yellow:  GG CC CC CC CC GG GG TT CC IR/HR FBR (HCS0103) FBRR + with QTL PRR + recombinant NA yellow NA yellow:   D 668-01-13 NA Yellow;  GG CC CC TT SEG SEG  SEG SEG SEG HR FBR, (HCS0723) FBRR + confirm HR PRR + PR In  seg LG06 NA Texas test yellow NA yellow:  E 686-01-13 NA Yellow:  CC GG TT CC CC GG GG TT CC HR FBR, (HCS0333) FBRR + PRR +  HR = PR NA yellow LSD(0.05)

Claims

1. An onion plant comprising a cis-coupled linkage comprising resistance to Fusarium basal rot (FBR) and pink root (PR), wherein said resistance to FBR is conferred by an onion genomic region on LG2 found in Serrana onion that comprises an “A” at position 61 of SEQ ID NO:7 and a “G” at position 61 of SEQ ID NO:17; wherein said resistance to PR is conferred by an onion genomic region on LG2 that comprises a “C” at position 61 of SEQ ID NO:24 and a “G” at position 61 of SEQ ID NO:27; and wherein the plant further lacks linkage of the complementary pinks trait to said cis-coupled linkage, and wherein said genomic region on LG2 comprising said resistance to PR is found in onion line SYG-75-1706, a sample of seed of said line having been deposited under NCMA Accession No. 202112015.

2. The onion plant of claim 1, wherein said plant comprises a cis-coupled linkage comprising resistance to Fusarium basal rot conferred by an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0345038 (SEQ ID NO:3) and NQ0257326 (SEQ ID NO:23) on linkage group 2 (LG2), resistance to pink root conferred by an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0257277 (SEQ ID NO:22) and NQ0258453 (SEQ ID NO:27) on linkage group 2 (LG2), and lack of the complimentary pinks bulb color conferred by an onion genomic region defined by loci NQ0257220 (SEQ ID NO:26) and NQ0257692 (SEQ ID NO:29) on linkage group 2 (LG2).

3. The onion plant of claim 2, wherein said onion plant is of an onion variety selected from the group consisting of North American Yellow and Universal Yellow.

4. A part of the onion plant of claim 1, further defined as pollen, an ovule, a leaf, an embryo, a root, a root tip, an anther, a flower, a bulb, a stem, a shoot, a seed, a protoplast, a cell, and a callus.

5. The onion plant of claim 1, wherein the onion plant is an agronomically elite line.

6. The onion plant of claim 1, wherein the onion plant is a hybrid.

7. The onion plant of claim 1, wherein the onion plant is an inbred.

Referenced Cited
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Patent History
Patent number: 11457582
Type: Grant
Filed: Nov 21, 2014
Date of Patent: Oct 4, 2022
Patent Publication Number: 20150150155
Assignee: Seminis Vegetable Seeds, Inc. (St. Louis, MO)
Inventors: Lowell Black (St. Louis, MO), Eva King-Fan Chan (Davis, CA), Jeneylyne Ferrera Colcol (St. Louis, MO), Richard Jones (St. Louis, MO), Chad Kramer (Winters, CA), Wenwen Xiang (St. Louis, MO)
Primary Examiner: Cathy Kingdon Worley
Application Number: 14/550,705
Classifications
Current U.S. Class: Non/e
International Classification: A01H 1/04 (20060101); A01H 6/04 (20180101); C12Q 1/6895 (20180101); C12N 15/82 (20060101);